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1st Annual Africa Forum on Quality and Safety in Healthcare
2018-02-19 - 2018-02-21    
All Day
Overview For decades, IHI has been a world-renowned leader in health care improvement, teaching proven methodologies for making and sustaining change. In February 2018, IHI [...]
26 Feb
2018-02-26 - 2018-02-28    
All Day
Hear, explore and learn the latest research. Present before distinguished global audience. Collaborate, build partnerships and experience London. Join the global academic community. Conferenceseries Ltd, [...]
Events on 2018-02-19
Events on 2018-02-26
Articles

Mar 10: HIT startup uses EHR data to get docs to recommend clinicial trials to patients

electronic medical records

An Austin startup is making it easier for doctors to inform patients about relevant clinical trials. ePaientFinder is using EHR data and compensating doctors for consulting time to make this happen.
The company’s software is integrated with a physician’s EHR. By analyzing the content of an electronic record, ePatientFinder can suggest that the doctor discuss new drugs and clinical trials with certain patients.

“We’re not just telling the doctors about the trial, we help them ID which of their patients fit the criteria,” said co-founder and COO Tushar Jain.

What’s different about ePatientFinder is that the company pays doctors for having these conversations with these patients. Not for making referrals, but for the consulting time, at whatever the appropriate hourly rate is.

“We want them to talk to their own doctor about it because that’s where the trusted relationship is,” Jain said. “With the clinical trial discussion, we will pay for it and whatever the doc wants we will do, video chat, visit, phone call.”

ePatientFinder gets paid when a person actually signs up for a trial or new treatment.
“Our clients are Boston Scientific and one of the top 5 clinical research organizations in the country,” Jain said.
The service is free to doctors.

Jain stressed that the patient data never leaves the doctor’s office and that conversations with patients about clinical trials are done in a HIPAA compliant way.

Tom Dorsett and Greg Sweatt are the other two co-founders of ePatientFinder.

The three started the company last summer and just completed a $1 million seed round.

Jain said that the software integrates with many EHRs currently and the team can connect the two systems manually if necessary.

“We are gradually automating it,” he said.