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Philadelphia Health IT Summit
2017-08-10 - 2017-08-11    
All Day
About Health IT Summits U.S. healthcare is at an inflection point right now, as policy mandates and internal healthcare system reform begin to take hold, [...]
International Forum on Quality & Safety in Healthcare
2017-08-24 - 2017-08-26    
All Day
The Kuala Lumpur 2017 programme The theme for the programme is Aim. Act. Achieve. We look to aim high with our goals for quality improvement this year. [...]
Events on 2017-08-10
Philadelphia Health IT Summit
10 Aug 17
Philadelphia
Events on 2017-08-24
White Papers

Can voice recognition truly enhance EHR usability?

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If you prefer traditional dictation and aren’t sure voice recognition is a reliable alternative, consider this.

Dictation comes easily to most physicians, especially those who started their careers before EHR systems existed or became the norm. Dictation is a tried and true practice. Why mess with something that works? The problem is, dictation in the traditional sense requires transcription, which is very costly, delays essential updates to medical records, and more critically, bears significant risk of errors that either add to a timeconsuming process of proofreading and remediation, or worse, go unnoticed and consequently instantiate permanent and potentially significant misinformation. Bottom line, dictation may seem fast and efficient to physicians, but the requisite transcription can prove detrimental, both financially and clinically. Voice recognition technology is replacing conventional
dictation across a variety of healthcare information systems, EHR included.

If an EHR system is meant to function in concert with voice recognition technology, physicians shouldn’t have to speak in complete sentences or provide comprehensive end-to-end narratives.

Download the complete Whitepaper here