Friday, July 22, 2016

Technology Is Making Doctors Feel Like Glorified Data Entry Clerks

Technology Is Making Doctors Feel Like Glorified Data Entry Clerks - Slashdot:
"An anonymous reader writes from a report via Fast Company:
The average day for a doctor consists of hours of data entry. 
Since the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act of 2009 took effect in January of 2011, which incentivized providers to adopt electronic medical records, hospitals have spent millions, sometimes billions, on computer systems that weren't designed to help providers treat patients to begin with.
Image result for Doctors confusedThe technology was supposed to reduce inefficiencies, make doctors' lives easier, and improve patient outcomes, but in fact it has done the opposite. 
"Frankly, the main incentive is to document exhaustively so you cover your ass and get paid," says Jay Parkinson, a New York-based pediatrician and the founder of health-tech startup Sherpa.
The systems are flooding doctors with important and utterly meaningless alerts. 
One of the biggest problems is that the systems have made it very difficult for doctors to share information between one another, which is what the systems were intended to do all along.
Why? 
"Because it doesn't help the bottom line of the biggest medical record vendors or the hospitals to make it easy for patients to change doctors," reports Fast Company..."

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