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Medical Philippines 2020
2020-08-12 - 2020-08-14    
All Day
ABOUT MEDICAL PHILIPPINES 2020 The Philippines would once again be hosting The 5th Edition of Medical Exhibition featuring 3 events namely: Medical Philippines 2020, Dental [...]
Agriculture & Horticulture
2020-08-16 - 2020-12-17    
All Day
Agriculture Conference invites a common platform for Deans, Directors, Professors, Students, Research scholars and other participants including CEO, Consultant, Head of Management, Economist, Project Manager [...]
18 Aug
2020-08-18 - 2020-08-19    
9:00 am - 1:30 pm
The definitive event for senior claims executives It has never been more important for insurers to make claims the focal point of innovation, agility and [...]
Events on 2020-08-12
Medical Philippines 2020
12 Aug 20
Seashell Ln,
Events on 2020-08-16
Events on 2020-08-18
Latest News

Cerner, Ascension execs call for EHR standardization

Cerner, Ascension

NASHVILLE—Cerner Corp. President Zane Burke said Friday that connectivity between clinicians remains an issue despite about $30 billion spent by the federal government over the past five years to improve electronic health records technology at hospitals and physician offices.

Speaking at a luncheon panel of the Nashville Health Care Council, Burke said healthcare costs are higher than they would be if clinicians had real-time access to patient tests and data across providers and offices.

Ascension Health Senior VP Mike Schatzlein, who joined Burke for the event, said hospital executives and IT vendors will be coming to Nashville on April 14 to look for ways to standardize records infrastructure so medical devices and equipment can better communicate with one another.

That meeting is being organized by the Center for Medical Interoperability to promote private-sector solutions to the problem that government can ultimately support rather than direct, Schatzlein said. Center CEO Ed Cantwell moderated today’s panel.

Schatzlein, who oversees 40 hospitals for Ascension Health, said the government’s $30 billion electronic records initiative helped providers across the country improve their systems, but they still lack easy connectivity because they are built on disparate platforms developed by different vendors.

“We still didn’t get a national medical record,” he said.

Each panelist expressed doubt that the government would approve a national patient identifier program, which would allow records to follow the patient from provider to provider. The political and security obstacles are too significant, they agreed.

Instead, standard platforms akin to the Apple iPhone and Android would allow vendors such as Cerner to compete on clinical applications rather than infrastructure, Cantwell said.

Source