ie8 fix

EHR changes are more than skin deep

By | July 30, 2010, 6:26am PDT

Summary: The gains of EHRs have yet to come to my doctor’s office, but business change is already here, and we’ll see about the rest in time.

I had my regular check-up yesterday and my doctor had a surprise for me.

Their Electronic Health Record (EHR) is finally installed.

They went with NextGen, a unit of Quality Systems Inc., not for any technical reason but because the hospital they’re affiliated with pushed it on them. It’s Windows-based. The first thing I noticed was an error message. It was just like being at home.

My doctor is about my age, he’s looking for a career exit strategy, so a close tie-in with his hospital, and the hiring of two new associates to replace one who left, provides all that. In time, my guess is, the hospital’s name will appear over his door and that will be that.

I pre-loaded some stories here and I’m glad I did. My NextGen appointment took two hours, mainly because the staff had to start a new chart on me, re-taking the family history and medication list they already had in a file folder.

Rather than acknowledge the productivity hit the strategy seems to be that can be passed on to the patients. We were an hour late getting in and another hour late getting out.

Exam rooms now have a flat screen near the door, on a hinge, and a tray below it sporting a keyboard and mouse. There’s also a terminal on the wall, sprouting all sorts of wired interfaces. I saw no WiFi.

The nurse who took my blood pressure found her wired mouse wasn’t working. She went out to get another and then got very confused. I pointed out the other unit had a mouse port, and the one she’d grabbed was USB. Fortunately there was an extra port or I might still be there.

The chart was partly pre-loaded with my name (misspelled) and my date of birth. Everything else had to be filled-in. The nurse added my vitals but my new doctor, a very nice lady who formerly worked at Grady and considered the pace here “slower,” did the rest. (Given the volumes the office was doing I had a laugh at that.)

Most of the benefits I saw of the new system flow to the business office. They barely glanced at me as I walked out. All billing, including co-pays, is now apparently electronic and tied into the hospital system.

The one material benefit I could see was e-prescribing. My doctor was able to give me a new heart pill to try while we were in the exam room. She just asked me for the pharmacy’s phone number and it was waiting for me, accurately dosed, when I arrived. Sweet.

One patient goal of EHRs, and meaningful use, remains unmet. That is the Coordination of Care Record (CCR), a computer file or printed sheet detailing what was done during a visit and what the next steps should be for both patient and doctor. That’s still on paper and kept at the office as a receipt.

All in all the experience was more like being in a hospital’s clinic than in my old doctor’s office. I think that’s what is happening on the business end as well. But next time my old doctor adds a new clinician, he or she shouldn’t have to do more than look up my name to know what’s going on with me.

The gains of EHRs have yet to come to my doctor’s office, but business change is already here, and we’ll see about the rest in time.

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Disclosure

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn has been a journalist, writer and part-time futurist for over 30 years. At the present moment I run only a personal blog in addition to my ZDNet open source blog. DanaBlankenhorn.Com has the subtitle The War Against Oil. In the past I have used it to write about political history, e-commerce, personal matters, some ideas related to open source, and The World of Always On, which is the idea of using sensors, motes and RFID to turn WiFi links into platforms for applications which live in the air. My IRA account at Schwab holds a few tech shares, most notably some Intel and Applied Materials, but there are no open source companies in it. I don’t even own any CBS stock.

Biography

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn has been a business journalist since 1978, and has covered technology since 1982. He launched the Interactive Age Daily, the first daily coverage of the Internet to launch with a magazine, in September 1994.
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RE: EHR changes are more than skin deep
DanaBlankenhorn 2nd Aug 2010
@mejohnsn Reducing the incentives to peek is the best way to solve the HIPAA problems. Mandatory coverage helped in that regard, with the health reform law, but incentives remain, unfortunately.
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Well, there's that "portability" thing, too. Instead of having your health records mailed or faxed over, you're going to have to re-enter them at every provider who's not affiliated with the others. It's amazing how much time I've spent lately typing in my medical history.

Lock-in is a huge benefit of the new setup.
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RE: EHR changes are more than skin deep
IanJSparks 30th Jul 2010
The CCR is an XML format that allows the exchange of this data. If the physician gave you this information on a USB key or on some unique URL protected by password only you knew then you could download it and hand it to the next organization that wanted to get your details (or load it into one of the Personal Health Record systems like HealthVault or Google Health). CCR is supposed to provide that portability.
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You're assuming
Yagotta B. Kidding 2nd Aug 2010
that the people who actually have the data have any interest in making it available outside of their network. Whether their legal liability concerns are valid or not, they make for a handy pretext to keep something valuable (your health records) under their control.
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EHR Does have their own problems.
Ken_z 30th Jul 2010
One glaring problem from your experience was that you couldn't prepare for your office visit online. You have a computer - why can't you log into a "patient" area, verify the data held, update your Rx list, and note problems. That would dramatically cut your time playing with file updating during your visit.

It also seems logical that you should be able to log into the patient area (a sandbox) and list issues between visits. Something develops, enter it instead of depending on your memory. You should even be able to select "Save as Note" or "Send to Doc Today" type of options.

And a killer of a cost cutter is allowing statements to be emailed to patients. Ask your doctor how much it costs to send out bills every year.
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Both good points
DanaBlankenhorn 30th Jul 2010
I can't argue with either one of you. Thanks. Keep it coming.
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I want to know what is being done to control who has access to this information. The insurance companies already have too much access, enabling them to already be too capricious and venal in their choice of who to insure for what level of coverage.
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RE: EHR changes are more than skin deep
DanaBlankenhorn 2nd Aug 2010
@mejohnsn Reducing the incentives to peek is the best way to solve the HIPAA problems. Mandatory coverage helped in that regard, with the health reform law, but incentives remain, unfortunately.
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CCR = Continuity of Care Record
IanJSparks Updated - 30th Jul 2010
There's a section of the CCR that relates to medications and another that relates to the plan that the physician has for the patient - future tests, immunizations, planned treatments etc. I'm guessing that was the part you were looking for.
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RE: EHR changes are more than skin deep
DanaBlankenhorn 1st Aug 2010
@IanJSparks The part I was looking for was the print-out.
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Yeah, reduction of pharmacy mistakes is good.
Blackbeagle2 Updated - 30th Jul 2010
Clear, legible Rx is a big plus and also pharmacies are sharing med lists so conflicting meds are less likely.
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Benefits of automation
DanaBlankenhorn 31st Jul 2010
@Mwatanuki@... These are early days for my doctor and his clinic. In any tech set-up you see the problems well before the benefits.

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