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Health Industry Moving to Computerized Records
| Healthcare IT News |
The health care industry is trying to catch up when it comes to technology.
“Other businesses have been able to figure out how to make it work, such as the finance business. You can get money wherever you go. Health care is really behind,” said Helen Connors, executive director for Kansas University Center for Health Informatics.
Connors said it is unreasonable to ask patients to recall their medications and past history every time they see a doctor.
“Why are we asking the patient for that information? We can’t rely on the patients or providers to remember everything, so it’s got to change,” she said. “I think eventually consumers are going to drive it because they are not going to put up with it.”
The federal government has earmarked $34 billion in stimulus funds to address the issue.
“That’s a lot of money,” said Dave Garets, CEO and president of HIMSS Analytics, which collects and analyzes health care data related to information technology. “The federal government has never allocated much of any money to provide incentives to hospitals and doctors to get in gear. But boy, they did this time.”
The goal is to offer incentives for health care providers to move from paper charts to computers during the next five years, and after 2015 penalize those who don’t by, for example, providing lower reimbursements for Medicare patients.
Congress is working on the details with some preliminary regulations expected by year’s end, Garets said.
Source: LJWorld.com
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