Events Calendar

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San Jose Health IT Summit
2017-04-13 - 2017-04-14    
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, [...]
Annual IHI Summit
2017-04-20 - 2017-04-22    
All Day
The Office Practice & Community Improvement Conference ​​​​​​The 18th Annual Summit on Improving Patient Care in the Office Practice and the Community taking place April 20–22, 2017, in Orlando, FL, brings together 1,000 health improvers from around the globe, in [...]
Stanford Medicine X | ED
2017-04-22 - 2017-04-23    
All Day
Stanford Medicine X | ED is a conference on the future of medical education at the intersections of people, technology and design. As an Everyone [...]
2017 Health Datapalooza
2017-04-27 - 2017-04-28    
All Day
Health Datapalooza brings together a diverse audience of over 1,600 people from the public and private sectors to learn how health and health care can [...]
The 14th Annual World Health Care Congress
2017-04-30 - 2017-05-03    
All Day
The 14th Annual World Health Care Congress April 30 - May 3, 2017 • Washington, DC • The Marriott Wardman Park Hotel Connecting and Preparing [...]
Events on 2017-04-13
San Jose Health IT Summit
13 Apr 17
San Jose
Events on 2017-04-20
Annual IHI Summit
20 Apr 17
Orlando
Events on 2017-04-22
Events on 2017-04-27
2017 Health Datapalooza
27 Apr 17
Washington, D.C
Events on 2017-04-30
Articles

Oct 07 : How Can We Achieve EMR Interoperability When We Have No Intraoperability?

emr interoperability

Article Summary :

We are trying to reach a point with Electronic Medical Records where we can easily share medical information between providers at different geographic  locations. The road map for “meaningful use” had targeted this for 2014-15. Yet, the most widely used hospital based EMR system in this country, EPIC, fails to even allow sharing of data within our own hospital about a given patient let alone between other hospitals and ours. How did we drift so far from the goals of having EMRs actually help us care for patients?

Dr. Robert Schertzer, in his article, tried to explain that the ultimate goal in encouraging everyone to move to electronic health records has been to improve patient outcomes. Improving patient outcomes means, patients who are healthier, catching them earlier in the course of a disease so that they are healthier and live longer. But not, what we necessarily measure when it comes to outcomes, opting instead to set benchmarks for closing the encounter within 72 hours and giving the patient a printout that shows they were seen.

For complete article, click here