News 8/4/09

August 3, 2009 News No Comments

Todd Park, co-founder and board member of athenahealth, is named CTO of HHS. He will resign from athenahealth’s board on August 10 and will divest his ATHN stock position to meet government service requirements. Park will report to Deputy HHS Secretary William Corr and will start on the job later this month. An athenahealth press release quoted him as saying, “My entire professional career has focused on developing technologies and services that can help our health care system work the way it should. I am extremely excited about the opportunity to help the Administration explore and catalyze new ways to improve the health status of the United States through the power of data, technology, and innovation.”

PracticeOne partners with the Connecticut State Medical Society-IPA to provide e-prescribing solutions to its members with no up-front costs.

ransone

Family practice physician Sterling Ransone testifies before the House Small Business Committee’s Subcommittee on Finance and Tax, asking them to consider legislation that would provide loan guarantees for physicians purchasing HIT systems. HR 3014 would guarantee 90% of loans up to $350,000 for individuals and $2 million for group practices, plus allow for a loan repayment deferral period of one to three years. Ransone, who was speaking on behalf of the AAFP, told committee members that without such a program, many family practice physicians would be unable to afford the upfront cost of EHRs.

Allscripts hosted its user conference last week in Orlando. The Allscripts Client Experience (ACE) brought in a  record 2,700 registrants for the event, which combined Allscripts clients and former Misys clients.

Speaking of Allscripts, Merge Healthcare announces that Allscripts has selected its Cedara WebAccess software application to “image enhance” Allscripts EHR solutions. The Cedara WebAccess portal will provide users a zero-footprint method of distributing medical images and reports.

Meanwhile, Merge Healthcare announces net income for $400,000 for the quarter ending June 30th. This compares to a $18.2 million loss during the same period last year. Second quarter 2009 revenues rose more than 15% to $15.4 million.

NextGen’s parent company QSI releases its earnings, which were below analysts’ expectations. The company reported a 21% increase in quarterly revenues compared to the same quarter last year, but net income declined 7%. Quarterly revenues were $66.6 million. Like other companies in this space, QSI says their sales have been impacted by delays in purchase decisions related to ARRA uncertainties.

I bet all these HIT companies are wishing they had some sort of cash for clunkers program that would spur providers to drop billions of dollars in less than a week.

church

Memphis Health Center and Church Health Center (TN) receive a $290,000 donation for telehealth equipment. The funds come from AmeriChoice, the TennCare branch of United Healthcare Services. Both clinics serve the under- and uninsured.

HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius announces that the Office of Civil Rights is now in charge of the enforcement and administration of HIPAA. Previously HIPAA oversight has been the duty of CMS, but Sebelius believes the change eliminates duplications and increases efficiencies in how privacy is protected.  Remains to be seen if the change will affect much of anything.

Officials from Medicare admit that Arizona senior citizens have been slow to enroll in a federal program that encourages them to store their medical histories on Google, Healthvault, or similar websites. Medicare and the Arizona Health-e connection say that adoption has been less than the estimated three to six percent of consumers nationwide using some type of PHR. Now officials are wondering whether or not to extend the $2.5 million project. One problem seems to be lack of EMR adoption by physicians: if the doctors aren’t using them, why should patients?

Larsen Billing Service, the country’s largest midwifery billing service, selects CollaborateMD to provide its hybrid SaaS practice management and billing software.

MD-IT cements its position as the largest company providing transcription services to physician offices with its acquisition of Transcription Prescription. MD-IT provides medical documentation services and software to 5,500 physicians nationwide.

girish

The Boston Business Journal profiles the open business approach of eClinicalWorks founder and CEO Girish Navani. Long before social networking was hip, Navani encouraged an open and uncensored Internet site for users, which is now used by 5,000 doctors. My favorite quote, “You can go on our social network and write, ‘eClinicalWorks is terrible, the CEO is a moron’ and we say, ‘Thank you very much!’”  Gosh, I’m not nearly that tough, so please don’t post any comments like that on our sites. The article also notes Navani vowed six months ago to add 500 jobs over the next two years, although the company has only added 100 so far.

inga

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Joel Diamond 7/31/09

July 30, 2009 News 4 Comments

More About Controlled Medical Vocabularies

I remain an advocate of structured data. I believe that it is the foundation for connected healthcare. As I have pointed out in previous posts, the art of medicine often rests on the nuances of communication. The patient’s chief complaint and the physician’s history of present illness can often tell a much richer story than drop-down lists and templates. We were taught in medical school to use the patient’s exact words whenever possible.

When I was in training, my fellow residents and I would often debate about the very best encountered chief complaint. Many of these involved malapropisms of medical terms used by patients in overcrowded emergency rooms.

It was not uncommon for women to complain of problems related to the “fireballs in my Eucharist” (fibroids of the uterus). Sometimes I think the gastrointestinal complaint of “die-a-rears” is more descriptive than the actual term (diarrhea), and certainly “sea roaches of the liver” seems more ominous that “cirrhosis”. One of my favorites, though, was a mother who was afraid her son might have a case of “smilin’ mighty Jesus”. It took me awhile to realize that she wanted me to rule out “spinal meningitis”.

The perennial winner chief complaint contest goes like this. An 85-year-old woman once presented to the clinic with “leaves growing out of my vagina”. Shockingly, physical exam confirmed this as true. Further history revealed that the poor lady had suffered from severe uterine prolapsed. For those less familiar with medical terminology, a pessary is a device that is inserted to hold up the cervix and uterus in order to keep it from “falling out”. This enterprising octogenarian decided to improvise and use a potato for this purpose. Potato… dark place… sprouts…. you get the rest.

My all time favorite (and true) encounter documentation would be completely lost of meaning (let alone humor) if it was documented with structured data.

Two seemingly unrelated traumas arrived within minutes of each other: a man with a severe laceration to his penis and a woman unconscious due to head trauma. The history of present illness is similar in both charts. The man and his girlfriend are “involved” on his kitchen table. Unfortunately for him, her poorly controlled epilepsy results in a grand mal seizure and unrelenting jaw-clamping. Frantic, he grabs a nearby cast iron skillet and whacks her on the head to make her stop. .. you get the rest.

Continuity of care and a patient-centered record are the holy grail of connected healthcare. Accurate and timely access to patient data is the foundation, but clinicians should not abandon essential storytelling just because of IT adoption. Documents, with appropriate free text, must be preserved, but … only when intelligently associated with overall workflow, can the art (and humor) of medicine endure.

Joel Diamond, MD is chief medical officer at dbMotion, adjunct associate professor at the Department of Biomedical Informatics at the University of Pittsburgh, and a practicing physician at UPMC and of the Handelsman Family Practice in Pittsburgh, PA. He also blogs on interoperability.

News 7/30/09

July 30, 2009 News 1 Comment

Emdeon announces plans for an initial stock offering of about 21.5 million shares priced at $13.50 to $15.50 a share. The claims clearinghouse and RCM vendor hopes to raise up to $332 million with the August 12th IPO.

Cardiovascular Consultants Medical Group (CA) adopts e-Medsys EHR from PracticeOne for its 13-doctor practice. The practice has utilized PracticeOne solution for over 30 years, having implemented a PM solution from one of PracticeOne’s predecessor companies in 1978.

If you have never checked out EHRtv, it’s worth a visit. The site includes an impressive collection of videos, news, and opinions on EHR and PRHs. CEO Dr. Eric Fishman and staff have produced a number of executive interviews, including one just posted with Allscripts’ Glen Tullman. The vendor demonstrations section lets you get a peak at a few products (and I suspect EHRtv plans to add even more vendors.) If you are looking to buy an EHR, check out Dr. Fishman’s “Vendor Selection 101” video, which offers advice on picking the right EHR for your practice.

macpractice

MacPractice releases its iPhone Interface 2.0 which includes new tools for remote charge and planned treatment posting, staff and doctor reminders, practice management reports and doctor referral data. MacPractice is offering the interface for $800, plus $200 a year for support and updates.

Cardiothoracic surgeons may be in short supply by 2025 if current trends continue. Researchers estimate there could be a 46% increase in demand for surgeons, but a drop of at least 21% for available surgeons. Fewer residents are taking thoracic surgery fellowships, likely because those completing training have had difficulties finding employment. And the employment problem may tie back to the increased use of stents (handled by cardiologists) over heart bypass surgery (performed by cardiothoracic surgeons.)

ecw

A big welcome and thank you to our latest HIStalkPractice sponsor, eClinicalWorks. We’ve covered ECW over the past few years as it’s grown to become one of the leaders in the ambulatory EMR market. Mr. H has interviewed CEO and co-founder Girish Kumar Navani a couple of times and found him to be a sharp business leader who’s always ready to shake things up and try new business models (in case you are new to HIT, ECW has partnered with Sam’s Club to sell its EMR solution.)

If you’re interested in learning more about an HIStalkPractice or HIStalk sponsorships, drop us a note. We always appreciate the folks wanting to help us keep the lights on.

The FTC again pushes back the deadline to enforce the “red flags” rule. The FTC moved the deadline from August 1 to November 1 in order to provide additional resources and guidance to businesses. The “red flags” rule requires physicians and hospitals to adopt written plans to  identify, detect, and respond to the warning signs, or “red flags,” that could indicate identity theft.

As one of the millions who regular reads Wikipedia articles, I appreciated this story. The NIH is encouraging its scientists and writers to create and edit Wikipedia articles in their field, in an attempt to make information more reliable. Earlier this month the Wikimedia Foundation hosted a Wikipedia Academy training session to encourage contributions from about 100 NIH employees.

E-prescribing appears to be paying off at Henry Ford Medical Group. Health Alliance Plan estimates that the collective administrative savings for physicians is $560,000 annually. Another $540,00 a year is saved by reduced ER visits and hospital admissions resulting from prevented adverse reactions.

Thirty-two people, including doctors, are arrested Wednesday in a major healthcare fraud bust. Federal authorities made the arrests in NY, Louisiana, Boston, and Houston in the third such sweep since May. Authorities targeted such scams as “arthritis kits” and claim this raid represented $16 million in fraudulent Medicare claims.

uant

A physician with Urology Associates of North Texas (UANT) recounts his practice’s move from an outdated EHR to a new one (Allscripts.) They survived the scary task of moving data from one system to another, a process that required taking discrete information from the older system, identifying and classifying it, then assigning to a new destination in the Allscripts system. He concludes, “With a sound, careful approach, an organization can manage the transition from one electronic medical record system to another without losing important clinical information and/or functionality of older data.”

St. Elizabeth Healthcare (KY) announces plans to roll out Epic throughout its entire system, which includes 31 primary care offices. Beginning in September, St. Elizabeth’s will  introduce EpicCare Ambulatory to its nearly 1,000 physicians.

inga

E-mail Inga.

News 7/28/09

July 27, 2009 News 1 Comment

From Peds Guy: “Re: interview with Dr. Christoph Diasio. The piece got a lot of traffic on the AAP/SOAPM list this weekend. All the peds loved it.” Good to hear. Dr. Diasio shared how he is using technology in his pediatric practice and provided some spicy and informative commentary on CCHIT and the use of PM/EMR in general. Great read.

starkville

Starkville Orthopedics Clinic (MS) selects 7 Medical Systems to provide the 7 Ortho-on-Demand PACS for its four-provider practice.

An interactive computer questionnaire may give family doctors a better opportunity to identify and intervene with patients who are victims of domestic abuse. Researchers found that when patients were administered a multi-risk questionnaire using a touch screen computer in the waiting room, detection of domestic violence was doubled.

Blue Chip Surgical Center Partners raises $1.8 million through private equity. The company builds and manages physician-led ambulatory surgery centers in partnership with participating physicians.

I accompanied a family member to an urgent care center this weekend. The practice used EMR, so of course I was (almost) more interested in the computer than my family member’s health. The software was template driven with lots of drop-downs and nesting. Seemingly plenty of places to enter free-text as well. Observations: the medical assistant took all vitals, then manually typed everything in. It appeared the template prompted her to ask additional relevant questions about the patient’s condition. However, she only followed the template. By chance the patient mentioned this was not the first time he has had this particular ailment, which actually turned out to be a particularly vital piece of information. At the end of the visit, the patient was handed an electronically generated prescription plus an education sheet (handy). Obviously it would have been cooler if the prescription were electronically sent directly to the pharmacy but that was not the case. The biggest disappointment was that both the medical assistant and the PA who examined the patient had to turn their backs to the patient (and me) to enter data. Overall the product seemed pretty efficient, but I was left feeling as if the computer created this unnecessary barrier between the patient and provider and reduced eye contact.  And, I wished the MA had not followed the template so strictly, but instead started out with a simple open-ended question like, “Tell me what is going on.”  It’s clear that even the most comprehensive template does not necessarily reveal the whole story.

Interestingly, this physician seems to agree with me. An ophthalmologist shares details of his visit to an internist, who uses EMR. While the author and internist agree that the EMR provided constructive tools for monitoring physician productivity and patterns of care, the EMR also has drawbacks. At the top of the list: loss of rapport with patients because the internist was required to enter so much data. The author notes that two-thirds of the visit was devoted to data entry. The conclusion: an easy-to-read computer-generated medical record does not guarantee high quality personalized patient care.

RelayHealth signs a deal with VHA to supply its RevRunner financial clearance services.

Seems like just yesterday we were hearing projections that retail clinics would soon be available on nearly every street corner. Estimates were that 2,500 clinics would be operational by 2010; today there are only 1,100. The problem seems to be with the earlier business models, which relied on outside investors for financial support. Many investors underestimated the amount of time it would take to return a profit and were unable to sustain financial losses while clinics were coming up to speed. Companies like Wal-Mart are now looking to partner with local hospitals, which seem willing to shoulder the initial financial losses, believing the retail clinics serve as an entry point for new patients to become connected to hospital-affiliated physicians.

RealMed and TSI Healthcare (NC) partner to provide RealMed EDI Revenue Management Services to TSI clients.

No surprise here: obesity rates are rising rapidly and obesity accounts for over 9% of all medical spending. One in four Americans are obese and each one costs the system $1,492 per year more than normal weight individuals. Would putting Americans on a diet pay for healthcare reform?

beavercreek

The five-provider Beavercreek Family Medicine (OH) estimates it will save $100,000 annually in transcription costs with the implementation of Epic EHR. The five doctors at Samaritan North Family Physicians are already saving $50,000 annually. Both groups are part of Premier Health Partners, where MyChart was recently introduced and proving popular with patients. Overall the interviewed physicians claim the EMR is not saving time, but does improve patient care and redefine workflow.

E-mail Inga.

HIStalk Practice Interviews Christoph Diasio MD, Sandhills Pediatrics, Southern Pines, NC

July 25, 2009 News 7 Comments

cdiasio

Tell me about your practice and the technology you’re using.

We’re a busy practice in a semi-rural county in North Carolina, where we take care of the rich folks in town and the incredibly poor people in town, just a very busy pediatric practice that in winter we routinely we see more than 35 patients per clinician per day.

It’s very important to us that we deploy technology that solves problems. The key problem that we identified when we started was that paper was eating the practice. As the practice got bigger, there were more places for the charts to hide. We wanted something that could help us with that.

We looked at a doctor data entry EMR. We were very unhappy with the point-and-click EMR because we felt that we couldn’t handle that level of slowdown. We also felt that our staff, which was not extremely technical, wouldn’t really enjoy that level of slowdown, either.

What we ended up doing was document imaging, starting with SRSsoft, and it’s been a great solution for us. When we were making the decision, we knew we were going to do a second office. That was an important part of being electronic. Not chasing the charts, secure electronic communication within the practice — those were all things that were huge value-adds for us, and having the faxable prescriptions so we wouldn’t have legibility issues with prescriptions. Those were all things that were a real value-add to us as to what to do electronic.

My big frustration is that so many people wanted an EMR because they were told they need an EMR, but they never asked what problems they are trying to solve. Just in the same way that you’re supposed to be trained in medical school, every time you order a test — why do you want this test? What is the reason that you’re doing it? And I very much encourage physicians to ask that same question about any technology decisions they make.

Because we had frustrations with our existing practice management company after we made the decision to do SRS, we switched to PCC, which is Chip Hart and the Vermont people. Because all the data that you need with the quality improvement, 95% of it is already in your PM database. We’ve been able to do great quality improvement work with that.

The big example right now is the Hib vaccine recall, which they just lifted the other day. It was very easy for me to run electronic reports to show me everybody three to 11 months who hasn’t had a dose of flu vaccine, who hasn’t had a dose of Hib vaccine. That is a real clinical upside, and people get these fancy EMRs, saying, “I need them,” and I say, “OK, what are you guys doing to make sure everyone’s had their vaccines?” Then I just get blank stares. People are getting these very fancy EMRs, but they’re not doing the most basic quality improvement work that could be done.

In the perfect rainbow-and-unicorn world of the future when all the computers talk to each other and the data is not in proprietary databases and you can do population data mining and you can do all these wonderful things — that’ll be great, but that’s not what exists. We can’t take the fact away that getting things much better than they are in a pure paper world doesn’t mean that you have to turn every highly trained physician into a doctor data entry monkey.

So is most of the quality reporting you’re getting right now is through your practice management system or through your EMR?

Through the PM. We have ways to do that inside the EMR, we have simplified things to do it, but honestly, we just haven’t gotten to that level because we’ve been having a lot of fun running reports inside the PM.  If you really start talking to people — I mean, all an EMR is is a database, that’s all that it is. It’s nothing exotic, it’s not anything which showed up from the moon, it’s not alien technology — it’s just a database. And that’s exactly what your PM system is — it’s just a database.

The question is, do you have structured queries to ask? The only value-add you get from doing doctor data entry is that potentially you can then ask very subtle questions of your data sets — “Show me everybody who’s got some new anti-high blood pressure medicine who then came in and had wheezing.” You can do that in a full-bore EMR, but you can also get pretty close just inside your practice management system. If your prescriptions are all electronic, you can run a list, “Show me everybody who had this medicine,” and then you can correlate it with your practice management database.

I get very skeptical about why people want to make me, as a highly-trained clinician, sit there and point and click my way through physical findings when the reality is that all that most of the usefule stuff is in the PM system as the diagnosis list. You’re really able to get all that data another way, so why should you turn your physicians into clerks?

I know you’re a big proponent of physicians really understanding the coding and documentation process. Why should doctors be on top of this? Why not just leave it to the billing staff?

The only person who knows what happens in the room is you. It’s not the billing person. Billing staff are trained that they’re supposed to defer opinions of medical decision-making to the physician that’s in the room. That’s just correct coding. As far as knowing what level to pick, you can always ask other people to do that, but when I talk about coding, if you’ve mastered the Krebs cycle, you can learn how to do coding.

The people that are coming to audit your coding are never going to be physicians. If you’re lucky, it’s an RN, but most likely it’s not anyone clinical, and it’s someone who, if you’re lucky, graduated high school. For physicians to say that they just can’t learn this is not realistic.

It doesn’t mean that every physician needs to be a coding guru, but there are certain very basic and simple things that we are all absolutely capable of doing. You ever see a lawyer who doesn’t know how to bill? It’s just something we have to know. It’s part of controlling your destiny.

How does the use of technology in the practice affect the quality of care you’re able to provide your patients?

More access to information, access to charts at home at night when you’re on call, the ability to electronically audit data, again, using the practice management system to find children that are delayed on vaccines. One of the big things now are the people who believe Jenny McCarthy instead of the Centers for Disease Control, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the Advisory Community on Immunization Practices, and basically every scientist who’s ever studied vaccines.

There are certain populations of people who just stopped coming to the doctor any more. They’ve stopped coming for check-ups any more. Unless you have a way to find those people, you can’t educate them appropriately. There are a lot of physicians who would say, “Gee, we have hardly any people who are refusing vaccines,” but then you go and you look, and I can find patients who came in for sick visits but never came for check-ups.

Other quality improvement stuff — it’s easier for the telephone nurse. Our telephone nurse sits on the phone and talk to parents all day. She’s able to see the charts, she can see what happened at the office yesterday, she can send e-mail messages that are secure inside our systems and permanently affiliated with the charts to the doctor that saw the patient a week ago that she has questions about.

You basically go from working in serial to working in parallel. Lost chart safaris have gone away, so you always have availability of the chart when you’re seeing the patient. Before, maybe it was in billing, maybe it was with the phone nurse because they were doing a prescription refill. So that kind of access to information is there. You have all that even without doing a full-blown EMR.

And how do you personally interact with the EMR? What type of information are you putting in and how are you putting it in?

We’re continuing to document on our same paper templates that have been refined in over 40 years of the practice history, so we get to document things the way I want it. If I want to ask about well water, I don’t have to argue with a programmer in New Jersey that I want to ask about well water. It’s an element that I can create right there and have all that set up.

As far as how we put data in, we do do some data entry when patients transfer in or if they get vaccines at another practice. We do enter that into our PM system and it also gets double-entered into the EMR, which is obviously not your first choice. But I’d much rather spend a little bit of staff time on that than to slow my physicians down every patient every day.

We enter all our problem lists and we do all our prescribing electronically through the computer now. That’s another way technically that we’re entering data in the EMR. And then we are able to poll the database and say, “Show me the list of everybody who’s on a certain medicine,” I can say, “Show me what doctor and everything they prescribe.” You can really do a lot of quality improvement stuff, just finding out what’s going on in your practice, whereas in the paper world, you never could do that.

Your SRS EMR is not CCHIT certified. Why risk the potential loss of ARRA funding by going with a non-CCHIT product?

Because it’s vaporware. ARRA funding is the ultimate vaporware. No one knows what it means. $44,000 is all that pediatricians get because we’re not as important as adult doctors. It’s basically irrelevant to me. Even as a lowly little pediatrician, I bill so much more than that in a year’s time. For you to make me do something that slows me down — that dog just doesn’t hunt; it’s just not going to happen. I don’t really believe it’s relevant.

I think the other problem with CCHIT is that the big vendors got together and had their own little clubhouse. They’re basically doing what makes sense to them and they’re deciding themselves what a good product is, which is so backwards of how the process ought to run that it’s even hard to comment on. Nothing is certified because you’ve had a 7% adoption rate. I would argue that the market is the ultimate certifier. If the people out in practice look at  CCHIT EMRs and say, “There’s no way I can do this; it slows me down too much”, it’s game over.

I don’t really see it as relevant. That’s just not enough money for it to be worth it for me to do this. This is just a major gift to the EMR industry and it’s the guy whose head of the VA said, “We’ve basically had major market failure,” and that’s why you’re having to pay people to adopt EMRs that slow them down. A one-time payment or a couple years’ payment is just not going to be enough to convince me that I should do something that doesn’t make sense to me.

Once you’ve seen one medical practice, you’ve seen one medical practice, and so you really need something that works inside the culture and the way that practice operates. It’s kind of like, “Who’s the person driving the train here?”

My response is that EMR has to work with the way I practice. I should not have to totally change the way that I practice just to document. No physician should ever be sitting in a room while a patient is telling them a simple or a complicated medical story, and ever have in the back of their mind, “How am I going to enter this into the computer?” It should not be creating diagnostic areas where we are squishing our brains into these little pegs, into these little holes that are set up by programmers who have no understanding of the practice of clinical medicine. That’s unfortunately the reality that I think we still have today. It’s just not enough money.

The other thing is, what is the real upside? The most important question you ever ask is why are people using these EMRs that can’t do meaningful quality improvement reports? Everyone claims they can, but their quality reports are like, “Show me everybody who hasn’t had a mammogram who’s over whatever age.” That’s great, but that’s not really relevant to me as a pediatrician. I’ve got simple, flexible technology that work well for me.

The other issue is that pediatrics is the red-headed stepchild in American medical care. It’s a very low-dollar thing, very few people are interested in it, so I’m not really afraid that the government is mandating that I have to have that EMR. At the end of the day, if they’re going to come out with a major mandate, people are just going to say, “I’m not going to do that” and they’re going to quit.

No one is getting paid to buy an iPhone. People are getting iPhones because it’s a fun technology that makes sense. That’s the thing that you need to do if you really want to drive EMR adoption — you have to have products that work well. And we shouldn’t look at technology as if there’s just one path. We should look at people that are doing document imaging and other things that makes sense to them that still give them 24/7 availability of medical records, electronic prescribing, knowing exactly what lab tests they’ve ordered, ability to birddog and chase referrals to consultant results, referrals to laboratory testing. You can do all that without doing full doctor data entry.

I’m just struggling to find out why CCHIT matters. It’s as if the Big Three automakers all got together and decided they were going to build their cars a certain way and certify that as the way they were going to make cars. You think that’s more relevant than whether the consumer wants to buy it?

What you really need is a governmental organization led and driven by physicians who decide what are the key criteria that are relevant to medical care. I find the whole concept that we’ve had CCHIT for how many years now and the same vendor can’t electronically transfer electronic records on one patient to the other same vendor — they can’t even do that, and they have a certifying body called CCHIT? It just seems ridiculous.

Anything else you’d like to share?

You have to ask, “Why are you doing things?” Everyone’s getting these EMRs because they’re supposed to, but they don’t really ask what they’re going to get for it. I go to meetings and say, “OK, guys, you’ve all got these fancy EMRs. How many of you are doing recalls for all your asthma patients if they haven’t had a flu vaccine by October 1?” And you can hear the crickets chirp.

And I go, “Why the hell are you doing it? What is the reason?” The answer is that you really should come up with a list of what you want out of an EMR, and then you should ask if you can get there without getting a full-bore EMR that is a proprietary software that has you locked in with them forever. It’s just craziness. And pediatricians also have to maintain their records for 25 years because we have to get the age of majority plus a certain number of years, which varies state to state. It’s a lot more of a commitment for a pediatrician to maintain a system for forever than it is for adult medicine where you need to maintain it for seven years or whatever.

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