Welcome to EHRReporting!  This blog will cover technology as it relates to the medical field!

EHR and medical treatment

I am a voracious reader when it comes to technology sector.  There is an article on PC World called Will Technology Change How Doctors Treat You in 2010.  The case in point is that EHR provides a near real time access to the data.  As a result, health care professionals can better monitor health issues and take immediate action.

Monitoring a patient’s condition in real time and using the information to develop a more detailed medical history could eliminate the need for some emergency treatment or hospital re-admissions by heading off health problems early.

The emergence of consumer health electronics such as portable ECG devices, blood pressure monitors or weight scales can allow the seamless capture and sharing of patient information from home, at work or even on the road. Portable ECGs, for instance, weigh just 3.5 ounces and allow outpatients to record electrical heart signals and transmit the results to doctors who can monitor them for trouble down the road. Advances in microprocessors will allow such devices to connect wirelessly with home computers, mobile phones or even remote Internet applications.

Score one for the positive benefit of using an EHR system.

Doctors for sale

I just finished reading this article called Doctors for sale on Nashville post.  The basic idea is that it is becoming harder and harder for doctors to be working solo and as a result more and more doctors are choosing to join hospitals instead of flying solo.

Faced with declining reimbursements, closed-off revenue streams, capital investment pressures and the changes of health care reform, many doctors are turning to hospital and health system employment to safeguard their financial and lifestyle stability…

But declining physician incomes aren’t the only problem. Like so many entrepreneurs, doctors face pressure to spend on new equipment and technology. In particular, physicians are mulling the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act’s provision to reimburse doctors and hospitals for part of the cost of implementing electronic health records — if they show they’re meeting certain usage benchmarks and thus help lower administrative costs.

The cost of maintaining an EHR system is definitely a burden on doctors that would much prefer to fly solo.  If an independent physician implements an EHR system in his clinic, he would need to hire an technical administrator just to keep the system up and running.  In this regard, there should be a push for SAAS based EHR system in which it can help lighten the cost for independent clinics.  If not, hospital will be the only place where you will be seeing your doctor.

Patient Records Missing in Ontario

I saw this article this morning and it definitely points to the need for better security when it comes to the  health care related technology.

More than 80,000 patients  are at risk for medical identity theft after an employee lost a USB drive containing flu clinic records, including patient names, addresses, phone numbers and health card numbers. Despite a 2007 order from the province’s privacy commissioner to encrypt personal health information (PHI) on any mobile device, the USB drive was encryption-free.

I can’t even comprehend how the device can be allowed to be encryption free.

Measuring EHR Meaningful Use

Obama’s stimulus fund requires EHR to be meaningful use in order to receive the stimulus funding.  However, the definition of meaningful use is very unclear.

Although the measures for meaningful use are becoming more apparent, it is also clear that the industry has a long way to go to implement many of them.

Providers have many questions: How will the metrics of meaningful use be measured? What level of implementation is realistic? And what is clinically sound?

Hopefully next year brings a clear picture to the EHR system.


Merry Christmas and Happy holidays

Wish everyone a Merry Christmas and happy holiday.  2010 will be a crucial year for EHR systems and the health care system in general.  Here is to a good 2010!

Study Shows 96 Percent of Doctors Concerned About Losing the Unique Patient Story with Transition to Electronic Health Records

Very interesting survey I see on business wire.  According to the survey:

Study Shows 96 Percent of Doctors Concerned About Losing the Unique Patient Story with Transition to Electronic Health Records

Also Shows Less Than 10 Percent of Doctors Are Confident that Federal Government’s Health IT and Reimbursement Standards will Lead to Higher Quality Patient Health Records.

It looks like most physicians don’t have too much faith in EHR systems even though Obama admission is pushing hard for EHR adoption.

Win your EMR contest

Never have I thought I would see a contest to win an EMR system but I would be wrong.  I always believed EMR is technology that requires careful evaluation and decision planning instead of software that you just implement.  That said, there is currently a EMR contest (The Tech Rx Transformation) where the winner will receive a technology solution package including hardware and EMR software, which officials said is valued up to $50,000.

Three finalists will be selected to participate at the Healthcare Information Management Systems Society’s  2010 Annual Conference in Atlanta, Ga. where a grand prize winner will be announced.

See the official rules here.

SEO Powered by Platinum SEO from Techblissonline