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News 1/15/09

January 14, 2009 News Comments Off on News 1/15/09

From Musing: “Re: EMR economic incentives. Let’s say I am convinced that Congress and Obama will get their acts together and come up with some kind of economic stimulus package that includes an HIT component. If I am a doctor, why would I want to spend my dollars today if Uncle Sam might be willing to help with at least a portion of it a few months down the line?” Quite the conundrum, but you will probably find out soon one way or the other.

A patient sues her doctor for failing to provide a sign language interpreter for her office visits and wins a $400,000 settlement. In light of that, a provider of American sign language relay services decides it’s a great time to announce its LifeLinks package, which provides remote translation services. To use the service, the practice sets up a computer with a webcam. When needed, the physician and patient receive face-to-face video access to interpreters and sign language specialists. Clients pay only for the specialists’ time.

A physician shares details of how an employee embezzled $50,000 from her over a three-year period. I’m always amazed how often this occurs. The stories always seem similar: the doctor is consciously providing the best quality care in a busy practice and defers all business activity to a trusted employee. If someone is determined and greedy, they’ll figure out a way to outsmart even the best computer system.

A Canadian woman files suit against Purdue Pharma for $31 million, claiming she became addicted to their drug OxyContin. She’s applied for certification as a class action on behalf of all OxyContin users in British Columbia.

Economic conditions lead to an increase in bartering goods for medical services. A couple of Maryland doctors have been bartering with patients since opening their practice three years ago and believe it has helped grow their business. Typical exchange items include office supplies, staff meals, plumbing work, and other goods and services.

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AAFP President and family practice physician Ted Epperly is a fan of electronic medical records. "I’m a big proponent. We’ve had an EHR in our practice here in Boise for four years. It’s revolutionized my practice. I’m more efficient. I make fewer errors. My data are more retrievable. I can give feedback to both my practice and that of my colleagues and the residents I’m fortunate enough to be able to train."

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Is EMR not the silver bullet after all? Booz Allen Hamilton and the Federation of American Hospitals release a report that concludes HIT emphasis needs to be on improving electronic communication among patients and providers rather than getting EMRs installed. Among other key points, the report recommends focus should be on e-Rx, electronic results, and medical imaging. Also, payments should tie to desired outcomes. In addition, patients need access to their records and have a way to communicate with their physician about them.

HHS announces rollout of an improved version of the Surgeon General’s family health history Internet site called My Family Health Portrait. It was built to follow data exchange standards that will allow it to exchange information with practice EMRs.

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A Las Vegas physician who planned to retire soon is shot dead in her medical office exam room by an 80-year-old patient who then killed himself. Police have not determined a motive.

The ambulatory care sector adds 14,000 jobs in December, despite the country’s overall loss of 2 million jobs. Hospitals added 12,000 positions and long-term care/home-health grew by 2,000.

The State of California investigates Kaiser Permanente and the protocols it uses in its call centers. The investigation stems from complaints of mishandled calls that compromise patient care. The state wants copies of the call scripts that Kaiser’s unlicensed staffers use to make medical decisions. Kaiser claims the scripts are proprietary.

City employees in Warwick, RI receive free enrollment in a PHR program that gathers basic health information into one secure place and releases it to appropriate healthcare providers. The ER Card is developed and controlled by the individual, containing only the information they choose to enter. The patient is responsible for keeping it up to date and the record will not include doctors’ notes. The city seems pretty proud of this great new employee benefit. Perhaps they haven’t heard of the little company in Redmond, WA that offers a similar free service via the Internet.

The doctors at Johns Hopkins University’s Wilmer Eye Institute know all about HealthVault, since HealthVault’s Be Well Fund is underwriting their automated patient reminder trial. Wilmer Eye will use MEMOTEXT to send glaucoma patients customized reminders via e-mail, text message, or phone call, reminding them to take their medications. The trial is designed to measure if automated reminders improve adherence to prescribed medication regimes.

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President Bush’s physician, like several other members of his administration, gets a last-minute obscure government job, appointed to finish a term on the US Air Force Academy’s Board of Visitors.

Staff working the ED at Waseca Medical Center (MN) wear white coats and stethoscopes, but they aren’t doctors. The hospital interprets state regulations requiring physician assistants and nurse practitioners to be supervised by a physician as meaning it’s OK to have that doctor available by telephone if needed. A 2007 survey said that one in seven rural hospitals staffed their EDs entirely with PAs and NPs.

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Incoming HHS Secretary-designate Tom Dashchle wants Congress to shift the nation’s healthcare model to emphasize wellness and prevention by providing more support for primary care doctors. "Every country starts at the base of the pyramid with primary care and works their way up until the money runs out. But the United States starts at the top of the pyramid and works its way down until the money runs out, resulting in a lack of primary care and wellness."

Ben Brown with KLAS Research claims that healthcare’s speech recognition market is on the verge of a "long-term growth curve of adoption.” Brown predicts adoption rates will continue to climb because speech recognition provides a “clear” ROI. Also, look for it to be increasingly integrated with EMRs.

The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality launches a Web site that advises clinicians and consumers on emerging drug therapies. The site also provides access to education and information resources designed to improve healthcare quality, safety, and effectiveness.

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Here’s a cool new iPhone application for the pathologist on the run. The Institute for Medical Informatics, Rikshospitalet, Oslo University Hospital develops a remote application for the review of pathology images on the Apple iPhone.

The Duke Endowment awards $99,000 to Caswell Family Medical Center for the purchase of an EMR. Caswell Family is a five-provider practice in North Carolina.

Former MedComSoft VP Mary Torrance joins Electronic Healthcare Systems to serve as EHR consultant for the CareRevolution product.

Telephone equipment maker Nortel Networks files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection .

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Joel Diamond 1/14/09

January 13, 2009 News 2 Comments

I love the pick-up line from The Wedding Crashers: "Some people say that we only use 15% of our brains. I say that we only use 15% of our hearts." Interacting with many of my colleagues who have adopted an EMR in their practices, it seems that most of them use only 15% of what should be the system’s capabilities.   

I recently asked a friend of mind why he hasn’t utilized many cool features like e-prescribing and a patient portal. He sheepishly answered, "To tell you the truth, I am just too damn busy. I wish that there could be some way that this technology would just make me feel like I was making a bigger difference in people’s lives and let me spend more quality time with patients."

With this in mind, I read last week’s National Research Council on Healthcare IT report with keen interest (BTW, Mr. HIStalk did a great job of summarizing the report).

The council’s esteemed panel recommended to "organize incentives, roles, workflow, processes and supporting infrastructure to support and respond to opportunities for clinical performance gains. Focus on identifying, prioritizing and managing changes in process and workflow."

Wow … that is so much more impressive than my friend’s quote!

I hope they didn’t spend too much money concluding what every front-line practitioner considers obvious. Let’s face it, most physicians are tremendously dedicated and work long hours. Any down time is spent squeezing precious extra minutes with patients, following up on tests, and calling families. Occasionally, there is even time to do preventive health.

To be fair, I would say that the technical accomplishments to date represent 15% of our needs. Let’s start working on the other 85%.

joeldiamond

Joel Diamond, MD is chief medical officer at dbMotion, adjunct associate professor at the Department of Biomedical Informatics at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, and a practicing physician at UPMC.

News 1/13/09

January 12, 2009 News 2 Comments

From Dr. Old-timer: “Re: Obama’s EMR plans. Do you think that Obama read the National Research Council Report before he suggested that all medical practices are computerized within the next five years? Does he understand that no one is quite sure the overall effect on quality and costs? If I understand the basics of the report correctly, it sounds like we lack adequate functionality in our existing products. So we need better products, need money to build those products, need money in the hands of providers to buy those products … all in the next five years. It will never happen.” Clearly we need to see a roadmap that details how Obama and team plan to get there and how to pay for it. But, I have to agree that five years is a tight timeline. First, I have my doubts that Congress can act quickly. In these post-bank and automotive bailout times, I don’t see anyone agreeing to pass out money without a plan that includes specific goals and plenty of oversight. And don’t forget the privacy folks will want to issue their stamp of approval. If and when Congress passes a plan, who is going to administer the money and to whom? Will vendors need to rewrite software to meet new governmental requirements? It’s all a big mountain to climb.

From Early Adopter: “Re: Practice Fusion. While I am glad Dr. Thakkar found an EMR that works for him, I would never take a similar risk. About 10 years ago I found a slick EMR product developed by a local start-up and got a great deal for being one of their first clients. They, too, were ‘eager’ for my feedback and making the product better. However, two years after going through all the pains of implementation, the company went bust. My current vendor converted all they could, but there are definite gaps. Sure, I like the idea of a free EMR and I don’t mind the ads. I even like ease of use and speed. But I will never again go through the hassle of implementing any software if I am not confident in the vendor’s business model and long term viability.” If you missed Dr. Thakkar’s positive comments on PracticeFusion, you can read them here.

surgeongeneral

The acting Surgeon General announces the release of a new version of "My Family Health Portrait," yet another personal health record, but this one’s from the government. I think they goofed in putting the password to the Tuesday media conference in the press release for the whole world to see, although I don’t expect too many eavesdroppers to jump on. Given the number of misspellings and grammar errors on the site itself, maybe that’s not surprising.

Two US Senators introduce the Health Information Technology Act of 2009, which they hope will serve as a blueprint for addressing health care issues in the upcoming economic recovery package. The HIT Act would establish grant money for health care providers to purchase (or lease) HIT systems. The grants would target safety-net and rural providers. Maybe it will be more successful than the HIT Acts of 2005, 2006, 2007, and 2008. None of those bills ever passed.

Solo practitioners are being especially hard hit by economic conditions, according to an LA Times report that profiles the failed practice of a primary care practitioner in Beverly Hills. She hasn’t been able to pay herself for almost a year, spent $40,000 of personal savings and $15,000 in credit card debt to keep the practice going, and finally closed the practice to work for a Johns Hopkins-affiliated practice. She said patients stopped coming when the economy went sour and those who did often stiffed her on their co-pays.

Kentucky’s lieutenant governor, who is a physician, says the state will announce a collaboration of three state universities that plans to study whether healthcare IT is a good investment. While some of the state’s interest may be because Kentucky’s incidence of heart disease, obesity, and diabetes is among the top few states, the LG admits that the main plan is to get a piece of the billions the Obama administration may spend on healthcare technology.

Texas Health Resources Organization for Physicians (THRP) and MedSynergies Inc. create a new management services organization called Texas Health MedSynergies (THM) to offer physicians revenue management cycle services and other business functions. Texas Health’s goal is to “enhance engagement between physicians and our hospitals” and give providers more time for patient care. The pricing structure was not disclosed. Will the pricing be attractive enough to make it worthwhile for a physician to consider, or will the doctors prefer to keep their money matters as removed as possible from the hospital?

projectswipe

MGMA announces its Project SwipeIT initiative, aimed at advancing the adoption of standardized patient health insurance ID cards with machine-readable information. MGMA claims the industry wastes as much as $1 billion annually as a result of non-standardized cards. If every retail establishment can read every credit card in our wallet, and every ATM in the world can read our debit cards, how hard could it be to standardize an insurance ID card? As I patient, I roll my eyes every time a doctor’s office has to photocopy it.

practiceone

Concierge Medicine of Las Vegas chooses PracticeOne.

In addition to shortages in primary care physicians, look for a shortfall of over 1,000 gastroenterologists by 2020. As the demand for colorectal cancer screening grows, so does the demand for gastroenterologists. The shortage could limit the nation’s ability to implement national guidelines for cancer screening.

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The 33-physician Michigan Cardiovascular Institute (WI) selects Sage Intergy PM and EHR. 

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Long-time Misys Vision client Physician Associates LLC (FL) selects the Allscripts Enterprise EHR solution for its 80-physician practice. The CIO of Physicians Associates calls the decision a “no-brainer” since they liked their Vision product and the Allscripts EHR. (Don’t you know that made Glen smile?) Allscripts also announces that Tully-Wihr Company, in conjunction with Ray Morgan Company, signed an agreement to resell the Allscripts MyWay EHR/PM to 100 physicians. In addition, Excela Health (PA) contracts with Allscripts for its 115 employed physicians. MDRX stock (blue) is looking good against the Nasdaq (red) in the six-month stock price chart above.

MD-IT, a provider of medical documentation services and software for physician offices, closes on $11 million Series B funding from PE firm J. Burke Capital Partners, LLC.

An article in the current Annals of Family Medicine questions whether consumer drug advertising really works. Patients asked doctors about a specific new drug in only 3.5% of visits, far less than the 15.8% found in a similar study five years ago. The researcher isn’t sure if it’s because patients no longer trust drug companies or whether poor and non-English speaking patients decline because of drug cost and lack of advertising exposure, respectively.

A Texas woman sues her doctor for telling her she can’t get a handicapped parking sticker just because her arms and legs go to sleep, the rudeness of which, she claims, caused her to have a heart attack right in his office. A week earlier, she had sued her attorney for being sarcastic with her and the month before, she sued President Bush because mismanagement of the local housing authority may cause her to lose her home. The kicker is her recommendation to the doctor: he should get psychiatric help.

As we start our second full week of HIStalkPractice, we want to thank all you early adopters, especially those taking the time to provide us great feedback. This week, we will roll out our first guest writer, Dr. Joel Diamond, a part-time practice family physician and an experienced EMR user. He also serves as CMIO for healthcare interoperability company dbMotion. We think he is smart and funny and we know you will, too. We are also lining up an EMR implementation guru to provide great advice and commentary on maximizing the use of EMR. In addition, look for upcoming HIT Moments that highlight assorted other physicians and industry gurus. Make sure you have signed up to receive your HIStalkPractice updates – and hang on for the ride!

E-mail Inga.

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News 1/8/09

January 7, 2009 News 1 Comment

americanwell

Doctors in Hawaii will soon be making virtual house calls to patients via America Well’s Web service. Hawaii Medical Service Association, the state’s BCBS provider, will make the service available to everyone in the state. Members pay $10; non-members $45. That’s a good deal for the uninsured, impatient, or busy patient. Not so helpful for the poor and/or elderly who don’t have ready access to a computer and Internet access.

Alabama Medicaid tests a Web-based EMR that gives physicians access to a patient’s prescription information and past doctor visits. So far, 59 sites are using the free service that is part of a $7.6 million project funded with federal dollars.

A California doctor finds a profitable business niche by helping immigrants from India and China give birth to sons, which are culturally preferred over daughters. Instead of the female infanticide sometimes used in those countries, the doctor employs "pre-implantation genetic diagnosis," identifying the sex of fertilized embryos before implanting them. Couples pay up to $18,000 to make sure their child isn’t a girl, which the doctor says is ethical since Canadians prefer girls.

INTEGRIS Health extends its deployment of Allscripts Care Management from two hospitals and 74 physicians to all 13 of its Oklahoma facilities. Allscripts also announces the sale of its Enterprise EHR to the 85 physicians at Medical Specialists of Palm Beaches. Medical Specialists is a longtime user of the Misys Tiger program, which will be integrated with the EHR.

Healthcare IT stocks fell Tuesday after a stock analyst’s prediction that any vendor benefit from the proposed Obama economic stimulus plan won’t show up on their bottom lines for at least 12-18 months. He downgraded shares of Cerner, athenahealth, Allscripts, and Quality Systems. The analyst believes that healthcare IT funding will not exceed $10 billion and much of that will be used for non-EMR purposes, such as infrastructure and a national health network.

sexton

Robert Sexton MD, a neonatologist and Vietnam veteran in his 50s, rejoins the Army and heads off to Iraq after a 38-year break, following his sons into the military as a major. "I figured we have less than 1 percent of the American people in the service, and some of those people are going to need a break sometime – and that’s what I aim to do. I’m still physically fit. I thought I could make a contribution."

Children’s National Medical Center (DC) selects eClinicalWorks EMR/PM solution to connect its employed pediatricians to the medical center. Children’s is also implementing eClinicalWorks Electronic Health eXchange to create a community health record. The eCW software will interface with the hospital’s Cerner applications, as well as the Sage Intergy EMR application used at other sites.

The 12 physicians at Horizon Gynecology & Obstetric Associates (GA) choose Sage Intergy PM/EHR. The group has been a Sage client for more than 20 years.

Summa Health Network (OH) offers free software to help physicians participate in P4P programs. Using MDdatacor’s CareInformatix technology, physicians will have access to Web-based software to collect clinical data from various information systems. Clinical data will then be compared with claims-based data. The clinical data will be used to support P4P initiatives.

Whitney M. Young Jr. Health Services (NY) commits to the purchase of a Cerner system following the receipt of a NY Department of Health grant. The community health center is receiving $897,000 from the state.

PracticeOne hires Scott Lentz as CFO. He was previously CFO of Picis.

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Physicians at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center (Germany) military hospital master Dragon Medical speech recognition software to document patient medical records. The champion physicians claim the software is faster, more detailed, and more accurate than transcribing. Because of the success, the surgeon general’s office has purchased 10,000 copies of the Dragon Medical software and is distributing it across 42 facilities worldwide.

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A Stanford attending physician pushes students and residents to spend less time in front of the monitor charting and examining test results and more time refining their beside, hands-on patient skills. "In short, bedside skills have plummeted in inverse proportion to the available technology," claims Dr. Abraham Verghese.

Physicians are adopting smartphones at a faster rate than the general public, according to a Manhattan Research study. Doctors are incorporating smartphones into their care routines to access drug information, medical calendars, and EMRs. Currently 54% of physicians own a PDA or smartphone, compared to about 20% of physicians using EMRs. Mr. H uses a BlackBerry Bold and Inga an iPhone. As smartphone experts (ahem), we predict the EMR market will boom when applications work as easily as the ones on our phones.

The University of Kentucky’s faculty practice plan implements a charge capture solution from MedAptus.

The Australian Medical Association opposes a physician code of conduct that would prohibit having sex with patients, writing phony sick notes for patients, and turning in incompetent peers, saying it would be a "lawyers’ picnic."

Inga has been a fan of Dr. Sanjay Gupta for awhile, so she is happy to see he is getting a promotion to U.S. surgeon general. Who else recalls that he was once featured as one of People magazine’s “Sexiest Men Alive”?

Is this a sign of the times? A 13-physician cardiology group sells its practice to Concord Hospital (NH,) making it the fifth practice to sell to the hospital in the last two years. The practice’s managing partner said the practice needed to buy an EMR to stay current and the hospital is covering the $250,000 cost. Economic pressures also influenced the transaction.

Earlier this week we published an "HIT Moment" with Mark Anderson, HIT futurist and CEO of AC Group, Inc. If you have suggestions for future interviews, drop us a note. Self-nominations will be accepted.

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A retired Washington physician publishes a new book entitled, “The Best of Wits End: Medical Humor at its Brainiest.” The 81-year old Dr. Harold Ellner compiled 450 pages’ worth of jokes that he collected over the years wile writing a medical humor column for a national physician magazine. Available at Amazon.

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An HIT Moment with … Mark Anderson

January 5, 2009 News Comments Off on An HIT Moment with … Mark Anderson

An HIT Moment with ... is a quick interview with someone we find interesting. Mark Anderson is CEO and healthcare IT futurist with AC Group, Inc.

We saw a number of HIT companies consolidate last year. Do you think the trend will continue?

markanderson Yes. With over 370 vendors in the marketplace selling EHR products, the consolidation trend will continue. However, we believe more companies will just close their doors rather than being consolidated. If an EHR vendor does not have at least 2,500 physicians using their product by the end of 2009, we do not believe that can afford to stay in business. Therefore, physicians risk losing their money if they select a vendor with a small EHR footprint. 

Additionally, vendors that are not CCHIT 2008-certified by March 2009 will have a very hard time selling their EHR product. Not that physicians are really requiring CCHIT, but from a marketing campaign standpoint, competitors will scare physicians from purchasing non-CCHIT 2008-certified products.

As the EMR market matures, products seem increasingly similar in terms of features and functions. What should physicians selecting an EMR evaluate beyond features and functions?

Functionality is important, but it should not be the only consideration. When evaluating products, we rank each vendor from a scale of 1 (low) to 5 (high) in each of the following characteristics:

  1. EHR product functionality
  2. PMS product functionality
  3. PHR product functionality
  4. Company viability
  5. Management
  6. Long-term support
  7. End user satisfaction
  8. Initial pricing
  9. Second-year pricing
  10. Contracting terms
  11. Negotiated contracting terms
  12. Performance guarantees
  13. Community hub pricing
  14. Community hub functionality
  15. Initial installation, training, and configuration
  16. Overall rating

In the past,your company has been accused of bias when compiling your annual AC Group rankings. How do you respond?

The best way to answer this question is to ask our clients if they think we are biased. What you will get is that we are extremely hard on all of the vendors. 

I have to agree with many of the vendors that our reports back in 2004-2006 were not totally fair since we only provided rankings based on functionality. Vendors receiving high ranking were those with the best functionality, not necessarily the best solution for any one physician.

We listen to the critics and, starting in 2008, we revised our rankings based on the 16 categories listed above. Now functionality only counts 18% of the total vendor ranking.

Starting in 2009, we are ranking vendors based on five levels of sophistication. This means that a physician can use our reports to determine the top nine vendors based on what "type" of EHR product they are looking for. This means that vendors with low cost, ease of use, and maybe not as many functions (level 2 EHR) can be ranked in the top 10 and will not be compared to products that might cost the average provider over $35,000 during the first three years.

Of course, there are always vendors that do not like the ranking system and the ranking that we provide them. Like the BCS college football ranking system, our ranking is partially based on real data and based on our perceptions and the perceptions of our clients.

The toughest part of any evaluation is determining the EHR vendor’s company viability and end user satisfaction of clients. Since 92% of the EHR vendors are private, they do not have to report any data on clients, revenues, and financial viability. This makes it very hard for a practice to evaluate a vendor.  

When it comes to end user satisfaction, if you believe vendor market data, every practice loves their product and they have no issues. When it comes to end user satisfaction, we believe that KLAS has the best data.  Even there, vendors always complain to use that we should not be using a third party study, but that we should only believe what the vendor tells us. Sorry, I am not interested in beach front property in Arizona.

You were an early supporter of RHIO efforts, yet most have struggled financially.  What will it take to make a RHIO or HIE successful long term?

We believe that the RHIOs will be as effective as the CHINs of the 1990s. Very few will create any benefit to the community.  

However, the concept still makes sense. A community of physicians and hospitals must come together to create a community-based EHR that will allow clinically pertinent data to be exchanged within a local community, not a region. Before we can have a region (RHIO), we need local communities. 

Additionally, the community needs to provide multiple EHRs based on provider needs along with an "EHR Lite" for the majority of the providers who want to start slow. 

Finally, the community EHR needs to provide one consolidated PHR for all of the patients who would like to opt in to a community data exchange. Patient demographics and selected clinical information (lab results, eRX, etc) need to flow between treating physicians following the government’s CCD/CDA data exchange standards.

Do you have any predictions for 2009 in terms of industry trends or technology innovations?

The number of EHR failures will continue to increase. Just look at the numbers so far. According to multiple studies, only around 17% of providers have installed an EHR and less than 5% of the providers nationwide are using EHRs for full documentation, clinical orders, clinical decision support, and for outcomes measurements. Additionally, the majority of the EHR vendors provide inadequate training and support when it comes to changing business and clinical processes. The vendors are teaching physicians how to use the software, but most are unaware of the clinical and operational transformation that must occur before true adoption will occur for the masses.

CCHIT will continue to drive EHR purchases. However based on our studies, 67% of providers do not want all of the functionally and the costs and they are not willing to adopt the operational changes required to fully utilize a fully functional CCHIT EHR. The main reason is not the cost, but the operational change that providers perceive the CCHIT product will require. For example, the average provider spends an average of 33 seconds handwriting or dictating their note on a returning patient visit. Since every patient is new the first time they are seen using the EHR, the amount of time required to enter the information averages 295 seconds, an increase of  over 800%. Over the average clinic day, the EHR would require an additional three hours of charting time, basically eliminating all of the benefits that are promised by EHR vendors. However, the problem can be minimized if we change our approach towards pre-populating the EHR with patient data before the provider starts using the EHR.

The next generation EHRs will enter the marketplace — "DRT-enabled EHRs". DRT stands for Discrete Reportable Transcription. A DRT-enabled EHR allows the physician to continue to dictate clinical notes for a specific period of time. The difference is that the DRT-enabled EHR populates discrete data via the transcription, reducing data entry time by 87%. In most cases, dictation is eliminated within the first nine months once the majority of the patients have been seen using a DRT-enabled EHR. Using multiple methods, a DRT-enabled EHR populates up to 95% of clinical data required for the creation of a clinical note, for orders, and for clinical outcome reporting.

Along with DRT technologies, physicians will learn that a majority of clinically pertinent data can be enter without touching the keyboard. We have determined that up to two years of patient lab results can be obtained electronically along with patient medications, diagnostic codes, and numerous other data via upfront data conversions. If we can pre-populate patient data, the transition period can be eased. Additionally, through community data exchanges and PHRs, we estimate that 72% of patient information can be captured without the keyboard.

EHR purchasers will switch from individual practices to community purchasers. From our research, 87% of EHR licenses were sold to individual physicians/practices in 2007. By the end of 2009, we estimate that 43% of EHR licenses will be sold to community-based initiatives including hospital-sponsored community EHR, IPA-sponsored EHRs, and not-for-profit EHR communities. These types of community EHR initiatives  can help reduce upfront costs by 45% and, via a community data exchange, can help reduce data entry time by 68%.

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