Events Calendar

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30 Mar
2020-03-30 - 2020-03-31    
All Day
This Cardio Diabetes 2020 includes Speaker talks, Keynote & Poster presentations, Exhibition, Symposia, and Workshops. This International Conference will help in interacting and meeting with diabetes and [...]
Trending Topics In Internal Medicine 2020
2020-04-02 - 2020-04-04    
All Day
Trending Topics in Internal Medicine is a CME course that will tackle the latest information trending in healthcare today.   This course will help you discuss options [...]
2020 Summit On National & Global Cancer Health Disparities
2020-04-03 - 2020-04-04    
All Day
The 2020 Summit on National & Global Cancer Health Disparities is planned with the goal of creating a momentum to minimize the disparities in cancer [...]
2020 Primary Care Kauai- Caring For The Active And Athletic Patient
2020-04-06 - 2020-04-10    
All Day
CMX Travel and Meetings programs meetings and group conferences for physicians and medical professionals throughout the United States. CMX Travel and Meetings programs meetings and [...]
ISER- 787th International Conference On Science, Health And Medicine ICSHM
2020-04-07 - 2020-04-08    
All Day
ISER- 787th International Conference on Science, Health and Medicine (ICSHM) is a prestigious event organized with a motivation to provide an excellent international platform for the academicians, [...]
RW- 801st International Conference On Medical And Biosciences ICMBS
2020-04-08 - 2020-04-09    
All Day
About the EventConference : RW- 801st International Conference on Medical and Biosciences ICMBS is a prestigious event organized with a motivation to provide an excellent [...]
Palliative Care 2020
2020-04-08 - 2020-04-09    
All Day
ABOUT PALLIATIVE CARE 2020 Palliative Care 2020 welcomes attendees, presenters, and exhibitors from all over the world to Dubai, UAE. We are glad to invite [...]
The 4th Annual Dubai International Paediatric Neurology Congress
2020-04-09 - 2020-04-11    
All Day
Based on the sound success of previous Dubai International paediatric Neurology congresses the 4th Annual Dubai International paediatric Neurology Conference expects to attract over 400 delegates devoted [...]
13 Apr
2020-04-13 - 2020-04-14    
All Day
IASTEM - 814th International Conference on Medical, Biological and Pharmaceutical Sciences (ICMBPS) will be held on 13th - 14th April, 2020 at Dammam, Saudi Arabia . ICMBPS is to bring together [...]
Patient Engagement USA At Eyeforpharma Philadelphia
2020-04-14 - 2020-04-15    
All Day
As we enter election year in 2020, the pressure has never been higher on our industry to justify what we add to the cost of [...]
28th International Conference On Clinical Pediatrics
2020-04-15 - 2020-04-16    
All Day
It is our great pleasure to invite you to participate in the 28th International Conference on Clinical Pediatrics Clinical Pediatrics 2020 which will take place [...]
5th World Congress On Public Health And Health Care Management
2020-04-16 - 2020-04-17    
All Day
We would like to invite you all people to take part in our Public Health and Health Care Management-2020 Conference in Miami, USA during 16-17 [...]
Topics In Emergency Medicine, Pain Management, And Palliative Care CME Cruise
2020-04-18 - 2020-04-25    
All Day
These set of lectures is designed to provide important updates in emergency medicine with a focus on anticoagulation and the management of venous thromboembolism as [...]
RW- 809th International Conference On Medical And Biosciences ICMBS
2020-04-19 - 2020-04-20    
All Day
RW- 809th International Conference on Medical and Biosciences (ICMBS) is a prestigious event organized with a motivation to provide an excellent international platform for the academicians, researchers, [...]
RF - 627th International Conference On Medical & Health Science - ICMHS 2020
2020-04-20 - 2020-04-21    
All Day
Welcome to the Official Website of the  627th International Conference on Medical & Health Science - ICMHS 2020. It will be held during 20th-21st April, 2020 at San [...]
30th Annual Art And Science Of Health Promotion Conference
2020-04-20 - 2020-04-24    
All Day
Integrating Health Promotion into the Organization’s and Community’s Core Values A common element of virtually every successful health promotion program in workplace, clinical and community [...]
ISER- 796th International Conference On Science, Health And Medicine ICSHM
2020-04-21 - 2020-04-22    
All Day
ISER- 796th International Conference on Science, Health and Medicine ICSHM is a prestigious event organized with a motivation to provide an excellent international platform for [...]
Biomolecular Condensates Summit
2020-04-21 - 2020-04-23    
All Day
An ever-increasing amount of evidence points towards the importance of Biomolecular Condensates function to health and disease. However, with many of the fundamental questions behind [...]
The Middle East Pharma Cold Chain Congress
2020-04-22 - 2020-04-23    
All Day
The pharma sector in the MENA region has witnessed rapid development, which has been largely fueled by high population growth, increased life expectancy coupled with [...]
45th Annual Regional Anesthesiology And Acute Pain Medicine Meeting
2020-04-23 - 2020-04-25    
All Day
ASRA was officially "re-founded" in 1975, led by Alon P. Winnie, MD, who had a dream of a society devoted to teaching regional anesthesia. (An [...]
25th International Conference on Dermatology & Skin Care
2020-04-27 - 2020-04-28    
All Day
About Conference Derma 2020 Derma 2020 welcomes all the attendees, lecturers, patrons and other research expertise from all over the world to 25th International Conference on Dermatology & [...]
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Articles

Sep 12 : Docs frustrated with transition to EMRs

frustrated
By Molly Rosbach / Yakima Herald-Republic
mrosbach@yakimaherald.com

Technology has enabled major breakthroughs in medicine in recent years. Scientists can grow body parts in petri dishes, surgeons can operate via robot, and an individual genome can be mapped for just a few thousand dollars.

But with electronic medical records, a crucial piece of health care reform going forward, doctors are still waiting for the technology to deliver on its promises. Meanwhile, they face penalties if they do not adequately implement electronic systems.

Electronic medical records, called EMR for short, were hyped as a solution to inefficiencies in processing patients through medical situations as well as safety concerns. No more worrying about interpreting doctors’ chicken-scratch handwriting with electronic prescriptions. Doctors would be able to predict which patients were at risk for conditions like diabetes by analyzing medical history amid vast new stores of data. Patients and their providers would have access to the appropriate records in an emergency room, a doctor’s office or a hospital.

Instead, at least in Yakima, many doctors are frustrated by interfaces that don’t allow them to input or receive information the way they want, which slows them down.

“Time is very valuable, and right now, when you talk to patients who are being seen by providers, they feel that … the provider’s spending more than half of the visit with the computer, not the patient,” said Dr. Michael Schaffrinna, chief medical officer at Community Health of Central Washington. “And that’s not right. It’s not fair to our patients.”

Part of the problem is the transition. Most doctors today are still used to paper charts, or at least dictating notes to be transcribed later. Many are poor typists. They’re used to writing patient notes in sentences, not scrolling through endless lists to click boxes on a screen for each complaint and symptom.

“It reads like a translated Russian novel,” Schaffrinna said of the stilted, computer-generated notes. “It doesn’t flow. And that means it takes a lot longer for people to find the information they’re looking for to care for the patient.”

Schaffrinna has been involved with electronic medical records in some form for the past 24 years with different organizations.

The real push toward electronic medical records came in 2009 with the federal HITECH Act, which includes incentives for providers to employ EMR systems that meet certain “meaningful use” requirements. In other words, it’s not enough to simply install an EMR system; it has to improve results for patients and collect relevant data.

“There is both a carrot and a stick incentive structure,” says Ian Corbridge, the new policy director for clinical issues at the Washington State Hospital Association. He comes to the organization after working on quality metrics and meaningful use in the Health Resources and Services Administration, part of the federal Department of Health and Human Services.

The carrot side, Corbridge said, is federal financial support to providers who implement EMR. But that support is by no means sufficient to cover the exorbitant cost of implementation, nor was it meant to be. For a small organization, Schaffrinna says, the patient portal alone costs $100,000; the cost of the entire EMR, including hardware and software, can be in the millions or tens of millions depending on the size of the organization.

Starting in January, however, the carrot becomes more of a stick because financial penalties kick in for providers who have not met specific “meaningful use” benchmarks, Corbridge said. The penalty is a 1 percent reduction in Medicare reimbursement rates each year.

Meaningful use requirements — think improved patient results and data collection — are set in stages, so once providers are up to snuff on certain measures, they are then required to address the next tier. Stage 1 includes providers ordering medications electronically, logging certain patient information such as allergies and vital signs electronically, and using EMR to check for drug interactions, among many others.

Stage 2 includes many of the same measures, then adds more: generating lists of patients with specific conditions to compare for quality improvement; using the EMR to identify patients who need reminders for follow-up treatment; and communicating with patients electronically about health issues, to name a few.

At Yakima Valley Memorial Hospital, physicians are meeting “pretty much all” of the 22 Stage 2 benchmarks set by the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, said Jeff Yamada, vice president and chief information officer. The list includes using EMR to order medications and lab studies, patient access to their medical record prior to discharge and the availability of images to physicians, among many others.

“Currently, we look very good to be able to attest for meaningful use Stage 2, which we’ll do Oct. 1,” Yamada said.

If Memorial doesn’t make it, he said, the hospital could lose the financial incentive payments, and after that, face penalties.

The incentive payments and the financial penalties are a big deal, providers say, because the cost of EMR is so high. Some smaller hospitals and providers around the country are affiliating just to share in the cost of implementation.

Schaffrinna sees the financial penalty as a double-whammy, considering how problematic Community Health’s EMR system has been so far.

Experts acknowledge that doctors see a significant drop in productivity during implementation of an EMR system and for the next six or eight months, at least, as they become accustomed to the digital format.

“They say you’ll recover. Well, not really,” Schaffrinna said. “You have to hire new people to do the work, change the workflow so the system can work for you.”

The unfortunate reality, he said, is that “these systems force people to bend to the system rather than having the system bend to the workflow or the people,” in part because the EMR systems available today are not designed by physicians currently working with patients.

That hurts the bottom line, both because of lost patient time as providers struggle to complete the electronic records quickly, and because organizations often have to hire extra information technology staff members to keep the system running.

Ease of EMR implementation depends a lot on the system, too, and almost every organization in the Yakima Valley is on a different system.

That wasn’t always the case. Yakima was far ahead of the curve when local physician Dr. Victor Sharpe and technology developer Greg Jewell created ChartConnect in 2000. Many providers used the system, so everyone could share patient information. But with the requirements of the HITECH Act, providers found that ChartConnect did not suit their evolving needs and chose new systems more specifically tailored to their practice.

“It was kind of like the Tower of Babel — everyone went to different systems,” Schaffrinna said. “So now we’re trying to achieve what we had in the past.”

One technology still promised for the future: “health information exchanges,” not to be confused with the state insurance exchanges. These new electronic exchanges will allow different systems to talk to each other, and with that hopefully comes sharing of patient information when medically necessary, eliminating redundant procedures (and forms for patients) and lowering the risk that crucial data slips through the cracks between multiple providers.

At Yakima Regional Medical and Cardiac Center, hospitalist program director Dr. Mark Silverstein says the system implemented under previous owner Health Management Associates works well. (HMA was bought earlier this year by Community Health Systems.) But he doesn’t bring a computer into the exam room; he enters notes at computer stations after he talks with patients. Doing the data entry with the patient present would detract from the personal interaction, he says. And medical staff still take some paper notes, though that will eventually be phased out.

As a hospitalist responsible for multiple patients each day, Silverstein said, paper records were more cumbersome and time-consuming. And riskier:

“If I’m going to order something new for a patient, when I input it, the warning prompts come up — oh, there’s an interaction, an allergy — it all works well to keep me from doing harm.”

Dr. Carl Olden, a practitioner at Memorial’s Pacific Crest Family Medicine, sees a lot of good in EMR, too. The efficiencies inherent in the technology — reviewing lab work in real time, prescriptions sent to the pharmacy automatically — can enhance patient relationships and improve care, he said — if they work as intended.

“But it takes more work to do that,” Olden said.

“People laugh at you when you type with two fingers. But if you don’t want to change, you won’t, and any change is going to be painful. If you’re willing to embrace change, you figure out how to make the system work.”

• Molly Rosbach can be reached at 509-577-7728 or mrosbach@yakimaherald.com.

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