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Home / MCNTalk / Tag: medical technology

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medical technology

January 18, 2013

Electronic Medical Records: Promise vs. Reality – A Work in Progress

Electronic medical records were fervently promoted as a panacea to medical inefficiencies, medical errors, and cost.

The reality has been to date, anything but. The New York Times article, “In Second Look, Few Savings from Digital Health Records,” outlines some of the disappointments that the technology has delivered to date.

Clearly systems relying upon handwritten and typed notes and reports, repositories of paper, and lack of portability are not worthy of the future. Quality systems should be secure, interoperable on any platform via a common set of data standards, and should not permit meaningless content and boilerplate or inflation of fees and improper billing.

Given our ability to put a variety of data on the web, one must wonder why the move towards electronic medical records has been so disappointing to date and has failed to deliver as promised.

There is no turning back but we are still in version 1.0 it would appear. Perhaps Apple or Google should take it on? Could it be that because it is “medical” it has been made needlessly complicated?

MCNTalk thanks Richard Bensinger, MD for referring this article to us.

Tagged: Cost Containment, digital health records, Health Care Costs, medical errors, medical technology, The Practice of Medicine, Workplace Situations 4 Comments

November 27, 2012

Medical Record Abuse

By Brian L. Grant, MD

The timely New York Times article, “A Shortcut to Wasted Time,” describes problems arising from improper use of record keeping.

It is important that those involved in medical care and treatment review, including those requesting these services understand the capacity of electronic systems to be misused.

There is nothing wrong with such systems and they are not going away. But as with most information tools, the quality of what is generated is only as good as the input, in this case the clinician doing the work.

Electronic systems can be abused and misused in many ways. And one does not need an expensive record system to misbehave. Microsoft Word will do. In the course of reviewing records, I have seen a number of abuses.

Here are a couple of ways to identify the misuse of medical record systems:

  • Boilerplate used where unique data is required: A psychotherapist working with a patient over time reports the exact same mental status findings from week to week, in the same words. People change and emotions are not static. The clinician demonstrated laziness and questionable competence when each note read substantially the same, courtesy of cut and paste or template.
  • Normal findings reading exactly the same: Physical and mental status findings have many variations. This includes normal findings. When an orthopedist reports the same range of motion on multiple patients, where the normal range can and does vary, a reader can conclude that the measurements are likely inaccurate, and the overall credibility of the examination is in doubt, including whether the measurement was actually taken.

In the old days of handwritten or dictated notes, each entry was unique and required that the clinician take specific action to report a given finding. Now with a click of a mouse, one is capable of filling a page or more with content. Just because one can, does not mean one should.

If you create records, demonstrate thoughtfulness and do not use boilerplate for findings. A template can be useful as a guide to what content should be included for a particular assessment or complaint. And typed records are legible unlike most handwritten notes.

If you read records and see findings reported in such a way to suggest that they were computer and not clinician generated, it should raise red or yellow flags about the overall quality and credibility of the treatment records and the clinician describing the treatment.

The abuse of record systems is a significant unintended but entirely predictable consequence of the technology. I invite readers to comment on their own findings and observations from working with or reviewing the work product of such systems.

Read More…

47.608945-122.332015

Tagged: Health Care Education, medical care, medical technology, mediclal record abuse, Mental status examination, normal range of motion, Reference range, The New York Times, The Practice of Medicine, treatment review Leave a Comment

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