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by rendaw
873 days ago
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Are you saying that the cancelled orders are due to a management decision/policy, and not a software bug? Or that EMR wasn't intended for managing orders and the decision to use it in such a way was wrong? Asking as someone who's mostly unfamiliar with this. Edit - I'm trying to make sense of this thread, and it seems like this might be a reasonable summary: There's good and bad software (epic). The fact that management chooses epic instead of good software makes it a management problem. @hyponatremia121 says that EMR software (epic) is terrible, which doesn't contradict the above. @hyponatremia121 pleading for EMR devs to focus on UX might be misplaced since their only experience is epic and not better EMR software. @duffpkg saying that epic shouldn't be blamed here seems overreaching. If epic were good/hard to misuse this conversation wouldn't happen in the first place. But there's always well marketed terrible software, and I agree organizations that aren't able to avoid this do have organizational problems. |
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In-N-Out does not as I understand it develop it's own Point of Sale system, they work with a vendor. What do you think would happen if In-N-Out had a location that was consistently failing to ring up orders or lose them randomly? Would the cashier blame the POS vendor and store management stand by and do nothing while the problem persisted? Would the system be rolled out without definition and documentation of workflow, reliability testing and proper training of the cashiers? Can we not operate our hospitals at least as well as we operate a burger stand?