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Food Technology & Processing
2021-12-01 - 2021-12-02    
All Day
Food Technology 2021 scientific committee feels esteemed delight to invite participants from around the world to join us at 25th International Conference on Food Technology [...]
Hypertension and Healthcare Expo
2021-12-13 - 2021-12-14    
All Day
Conference series LLC LTD is gratified to organize continuing medical education (CME) accredited event “2nd Global Conclave on Hypertension & Healthcare” scheduled on August 25-24, [...]
Events on 2021-12-01
Events on 2021-12-13
Articles

Aug 14 : Doc takes time out for meaningful use stage 2 requirements

doc

by : Shaun Sutner


Stasia Kahn, a physician in the Chicago suburbs, spent 100 hours attesting to meaningful use stage 2 requirements. Many were easy. Some were hard. She feels it was worth the work she invested in it.

This is the latest in an occasional series of meaningful use stage 2 attestation success stories. This installment features an eClinicalWorks customer.

Stasia Kahn, M.D., has always seen herself as an early adopter of new technologies, a techie who taught herself informatics and who takes pride in her blog: “EMR Survival: The Definitive Guide for a Digital Medical Practice.”

So in January 2014 when the race was on to attest to meaningful use stage 2 requirements, Kahn thought she’d get done by the end of the first quarter what many physicians imagine a pretty complicated and time-consuming process.

It wouldn’t happen quite that quickly, but the internal medicine doctor — who runs Symphony Medical Group, a busy, small practice in the Chicago suburbs — nonetheless finished attesting to 17 meaningful use core criteria and three measures from a “menu” of six more difficult criteria, including eight new categories new to stage 2, in six months. Maybe not record time, but pretty close.

Did I make money or lose money? It was just part of an overall strategy of excellence in healthcare. That’s the path I wanted to be on.

Stasia Kahn, M.D.Symphony Medical Group

The work did, indeed, take a lot of her time, which Kahn squeezed in around tending to the 800 or so patients she cares for along with a part-time doctor, a medical assistant, an office administrator and some part-time help. There was no CIO or IT director to assist; she was it.

But it was well worth it, Kahn said.

“For me, the decision I made starting with stage 1 is that technology can make me a better doctor,” she said. “The decision to do this was a long-term investment on my part.”