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An Affordable Fix for Modernizing Medical Records

Wall Street Journal Original article ›

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Results at Midland Memorial Hospital in Texas, show that a low cost conversion to electronic medical records by using the VA system's open software and having computer software companies adapt it to Midland's needs. This cost Midland $7 million and has resulted in many benefits. Senator Rockefeller is introducing legislation to promote the use of this open software for conversion to electronic medical records. Medsphere chairman Kenneth Kizer, former undersecretary ohealth care at the VA oversaw the development of VIstA software. He says its enhanced version called Open Vist A, "can be installed in one third the timeand for about one thrid the cost of the big-name proprietary systems." There is alot to be said for open software as this would enable hospitals and clinics acoross the country talk to each other and pull up records and sen them electronically, wich is hard to do when different systems of differnt commerical vendors interact. If Midland Memorial is any guide there are huge savings in the conversion. By enabling access instantly of patient records, lab results and Xray images, there are a huge array of benefits. It helped Midland catch up with a$16.7 million coding and billing backlog for 4,500 patient records in 4 weeks instead of 5-6 months. In the 18 months since the system was made hospital wideinfection rates dropped 88%, because of guidelines in the record system that prompted nurses to follow infection control procedures, such as changing dressing or following procedures when inserting a new IV. That is huge. Bed sores were reduced from electronic prompting to nurses to turn patients.And Midland increased by 77%in staff compliancewith guidelinesfor care for patientson ventilators, which if not followed could lead to pheumonia.

Conversion to electronic medical records in healthcare at lower cost using open source software.

04/30/2009

Benefits from the conversion to digital medical records appear to be huge from some examples, at a cost hospitals can afford.

Grouped Articles

Boss Talk: Updating Doctors' Offices With the Help of Cloud Services

Wall Street Journal 04/16/2013

Digital Records May Not Cut Health Costs, Study Cautions

New York Times 03/05/2012

The Lessons Thus Far From the Transition to Digital Patient Records

New York Times 07/28/2014

An Affordable Fix for Modernizing Medical Records

Wall Street Journal 04/30/2009

Getting Docs to Use PCs

Wall Street Journal 03/15/2011

Digital Records May Not Cut Health Costs, Study Cautions

New York Times 03/05/2012


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