Have EHR’s Reduced Patients to Faceless Data ?
The jury is still out on this one. Have EHR’s helped in bettering patient engagement or are stealing away the doc’s time? Patients complain that watching a medical practitioner silently collect data is the most frustrating sight on earth! After struggling to get an appointment from your busy neighborhood doc, it can drive you nuts to see that he is busy clicking on templates.
A Crude truth…
CRUD which means Create, Read, Update and Delete is not just another smart abbreviation. It is a sad fact that reflects what goes on in the physician’s office today. Creating information, analyzing it and editing data, eats up an enormous amount of time. Most docs are contemplating retirement to get away from the bureaucratic interference and hum drum of working with systems.
Has Someone lost the Plot ?
There is a growing disillusion with EMR’s because most of them are designed to be high-end data entry machines. A huge doubt is being cast on whether they actually help in bettering healthcare. EMR’s were supposed to reduce clinical documentation mistakes, prescription errors, retrieving data and saving on costs. And according to a few doctors fail on all counts.
Physicians fume that they are doing the same thing, several hundred times a week. Data entry takes time because of the frustrating loading times. E-prescribing is strenuous, as it is one drug at time. The, point, click, wait rigmarole results in point and click errors, and can be a potential hazard for patient safety.
Times they’re a Changing…
This immortal Bob Dylan cult number could well be the anthem of the healthcare industry today. Despite scathing criticism and the flak EHR’s face it is an indisputable fact that there are several upshots to using one. Accountable, traceable care, across all points in the healthcare continuum is a godsend for busy physicians without a photographic memory.
Data structures are improving. Integrated, inter-operable and more secure data architectures that are more physicians friendly are rolling out. Contrary to what the naysayers complain, this could well be the best time to be a medical practitioner.
Treading with care…
Transitory phases can be tricky. It is the last man standing who comes out at the other end as a winner. Every medical practice should ensure that they sign up for a free trial with the EHR they are planning to use. So it is not the first time they’re handling the system. EHR users must demand better and frequent, tech-support.
It is important that physicians are healthcare IT savvy but we don’t want them to be reduced to impersonal, data collecting, super efficient machines. Do we ?