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American Academy of Pediatrics Virtual National Conference & Exhibition
2020-10-02 - 2020-10-05    
12:00 am
Organized by the American Academy of Pediatrics Experience education wherever you are, whenever you’d like with over 150 on-demand sessions and more than 35 live [...]
16th World Congress on Public Health 2020
2020-10-12 - 2020-10-16    
12:00 am
Organized by Multiple Partners or Sponsors The global public health community will be meeting at a critical time for our planet. Global temperatures lie far [...]
BARDA Industry Day
2020-10-27    
12:00 am
Organized by BARDA BARDA Industry Day is the annual meeting held to increase potential partner’s awareness of U.S. Government medical countermeasure priorities, interact with BARDA [...]
Events on 2020-10-12
Events on 2020-10-27
BARDA Industry Day
27 Oct 20
Articles

Sep 11 : Docs Say EMRs Waste Time

emrs

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While electronic medical records are supposed to advance the practice of medicine and health maintenance, doctors aren’t so sure.  In fact, the results of a recent survey show that physicians believe EMRs lead to a loss of more than six hours per week of valuable clinic time.

The American College of Physicians (ACP) sent a survey to 845 internal medicine physicians, residents and fellows “to get a sense of the EMR’s overall effect on internist’s time budget,” according to a research letter published in the current JAMA Internal Medicine.  Nine out of 10 doctors said “that at least one data management function was slower post-EMR adoption and 63.9% reported that note writing took longer,” said the authors, led by Clement McDonald, M.D., director of the National Library of Medicine’s Lister Hill National Center for Biomedical Communications.

When asked how many minutes per clinic day were lost due to EMR usage, doctors replied with a mean loss of 78 minutes per day, which equals 6.5 hours per five day clinic week.

“The loss of free time that our respondents reported was large and pervasive and could decrease access or increase costs of care,” wrote Dr. McDonald.  ”Surprisingly, [one] third reported that it took longer to find and review medical record data with the EMR than without.”

Source