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by Herodotus38
3384 days ago
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So I think your ideas are good, but you have to realize the multiple competing priorities in healthcare. When you say ideally, you mean from a privacy standpoint. In my opinion "best health outcome of the patient" should be the highest ideal. Say I am working a night where I may be paged on 100 patients who I am meeting for the first time. Just opening their records on The EMR eats a significant amount of time. Time which I need to take care of people. Adding an additional click would mean even less time and poorer outcomes. You also have to realize that nobody is going to carry a USB. I have worked in diabetes clinics where most pts don't remember to bring in their glucometer, which is the entire point of the clinic. You have to realize that the patient population also includes the average American (and half by definition are below average intelligence.) I mean, I could go on for hours and make my own personal list of the issues with American Healthcare and I wouldn't list pt privacy in the first 100.... Not trying to be dismissive but I'm just trying to give you computer technical folk an idea of why EMR is such a hard field and how many factors you have to consider which is really difficult if you aren't 'in' the system. Even I who knows more about programming than 99% of docs feel completely ignorant when I talk to healthcare IT folks about HL7, etc... |
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I don't think the challenges you mention are unsurmountable-
An ER doctor seeing 100 patients a night might have the system setup to automatically log in as an emergency, and they already need to log the reason for the appointment- or else there is no there is no record of it...
Setting up the initial access should be handled by staff during check-in for non-emergency visits.
Patients are generally already expected to carry a health insurance card (at least in the US- not sure how that is handled in countries with Government provided health-care). As the system becomes more widespread, it would become normal for everyone to have a security token, and they could use those tokens for access to multiple systems, not just health care (The USB disk thing is probably optional, just a slight improvement for when the network is down or you can't otherwise access the information).
I also think the User Experience on the systems I have seen could be greatly improved to reduce unnecessary clicks- and I have noticed that more often then not though- loading information over a slow network takes more time than navigating the GUI.
I would agree that the problems with health care go far beyond EMR systems, but they were the topic of the discussion.
Thanks for participating, I want to better understand all of the issues and these types of discussions help a lot toward that goal.