| "The source of the problem is that the people deciding which EHR to use are almost never the people using it. " Yes, this. We are a Cerner (now Oracle, yaaaaa) site, not Epic. The Cerner folks I've met in smallish meetings are nice/great on the front lines. However, the deal that our CEO/CFO/COO/CMIO made with Cerner was years ago and, per rumor, involved large financial penalties for early cancellation. Subsequent people in those roles have chosen to uphold the contract. The local management and healthcare teams in my particular facility are great but I take a dim view of our c-suite as do the majority of the work force. Things are reasonable locally for most people, I think, except for the EHR. So, I would plead with leadership teams of EMRs, EHRs, healthcare systems, and shareholders of these entities to do the right thing and give healthcare workers working in high-risk settings the proper tools they need. You are currently failing us. No one wants unreliable, difficult software installed in critical settings such as ICUs. I've submitted tickets, emailed leadership and had conversations with the CMIO. If there is improvement it is so slow that I cannot discern it. In anecdotal conversations over the years I've observed that the vast majority of healthcare workers hate all EMRs but give Epic the nod because it is the least worst, and for some, reasonable. I have met a few Epic users that are enthusiastic about the software but that is after they arrived at our Cerner site and were in shock. @duffpkg - my original comment was under yours and I wasn't intending to malign your project. I'm not familiar with it but do like that it is open source. Respect to the developers that work on EHRs. I recognize you are held down by management. I'm perplexed by UX/UI problems in EMRs. This must cost more to fix than I suspect. It seems to be the easiest of the issues from my layperson/healthcareworker/tech-enthusiast viewpoint. One more thing to add: an effect of bad EHR is healthcare worker burnout. Bad EHR is a known contributor. Burned out healthcare workers are at increased risk to make medical errors. Bad EHR -> burnout -> errors -> adverse outcomes. This is a well known flow to us in the clinical setting that we attempt to mitigate. The executive teams of orgs that produce or purchase EHRs are never held accountable for bad outcomes even though, to my view, they share responsibility. Edit: government regulators (CMS, etc) also share in the blame for bad EHR and outcomes. |