Ontario is making progress on its commitment to ensure every Ontarian has an electronic health record by expanding their use into 90 community-based health care clinics, giving 500,000 patients access to an electronic health record.
Forty-five of Ontario’s 90 Association of Ontario Health Centre member clinics, including Community Health Centres, Nurse-Practitioner-Led Clinics and Aboriginal Health Access Centres, have already added electronic health records into their practice. This includes the Davenport-Perth Neighbourhood and Community Health Centre and seven others in Toronto.
By moving from a cumbersome paper-based system to secure, electronic health records, health care providers will be able to better serve patients by:
- Electronically creating, managing and sharing patient information more easily among a patient’s health care providers.
- Enhancing the delivery of preventive care and chronic disease management.
- Using electronic health record-generated alerts to avoid adverse drug-to-drug interactions.
- Sharing and storing secure lab results and helping to eliminate duplication of lab tests.
Modernizing Ontario’s health care system and finding more efficient and effective ways to deliver care for patients supports the province’s Action Plan for Health Care. This is part of the government’s economic plan to invest in people, build modern infrastructure, and support a dynamic and innovative business climate.
Quick Facts
- Davenport-Perth Neighbourhood and Community Health Centre has also benefitted from $4.3 million in capital funding from the province for the planning and construction of their new site.
- Ontario has expanded Community Health Centres from 54 sites to over 105 sites, providing better care to patients including those from rural, northern and Aboriginal communities, as well as homeless, refugees and new Canadians.
- More than nine million Ontarians have an electronic health record and 75 per cent of family physicians are using them in their practice.