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14 Jun
2018-06-14 - 2018-06-15    
All Day
ConferenceSeries LLC Ltd in conjunction with its institutional partners and Editorial Board Members are delighted to invite you all to the 13th World Congress on Healthcare and Technologies  going [...]
21 Jun
2018-06-21 - 2018-06-22    
All Day
Conference Series extends its welcome to 2nd World Congress on Patient Safety & Quality Healthcare June 21-22, 2018 Dublin, Ireland. With a theme “Consolidating Knowledge to Improve [...]
Events on 2018-06-14
Events on 2018-06-21
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.”