[Med-privacy] "e-records"

pmarshall pwm@comcast.net
Sun, 24 Oct 2004 15:51:31 -0700


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  FCW

Sunday, October 24, 2004


      Doctors wanted for e-records

BY Bob Brewin <mailto:bbrewin@fcw.com>
Published on Oct. 22, 2004


RELATED LINKS

<http://www.fcw.com/fcw/articles/2004/1011/web-ehr-10-15-04.asp>[....]

"E-records vital to health strategy" 
<http://www.fcw.com/fcw/articles/2004/0802/pol-erecords-08-02-04.asp> 
[Federal Computer Week, Aug. 2, 2004]

Development of a nationwide system for electronic health records hinges 
on widescale adoption by physicians and group practices. But U.S. 
doctors are reluctant to adopt technology, even if they are given 
equipment and software, a health care information technology leader said 
at a conference this week.

Unless officials from small doctor's offices and small physicians groups 
embrace electronic health records, they cannot meet President Bush's 
goal of developing such records within a decade, said Dr. David Brailer, 
National Health IT Coordinator at the Department of Health and Human 
Services.

For electronic records to work in the health industry, they must be 
adopted by doctors in large urban practices and by their counterparts in 
small, rural practices. The country can't be divided into a nation of 
health IT haves and have-nots, Brailer said, speaking at the Health IT 
Summit sponsored by the eHealth Initiative.

Experts have estimated that a national system for electronic health 
records could cost up to $700 billion.

Leonard Schaeffer, chairman and chief executive officer of WellPoint 
Health Networks Inc., an insurance company based in Thousand Oaks, 
Calif, said company officials have convinced doctors to adopt 
technology, but the process wasn't easy even though the hardware or 
software was free.

WellPoint officials offered to provide 19,000 doctors with a free system 
for electronic prescriptions or a free office automation package. But 
the insurance firm had to contact 25,000 doctors before it found a pool 
of 19,000 willing to take the offer worth $40 million for hardware and 
software. Most opted for the office automation package, and only 2,700 
signed up for e-prescriptions, based on a Dell Inc. Axim handheld 
computer. Schaeffer said those statistics reflected the low adoption of 
e-prescribing in the United States, where almost 90 percent of doctors 
still write prescriptions by hand.

Brailer said U.S. doctors face a negative business case with electronic 
records systems and HHS. Insurance companies need to develop financial 
incentives to spur adoption of technology incentives such as 
pay-for-performance and pay-for-use inducements, Brailer added.

Officials at the United Kingdom's National Health Service have devised a 
simple way to get doctors to use electronic health records, said Richard 
Granger, NHS' director general for IT. NHS officials plan to spend $64 
billion during the next decade on electronic health records systems. 
Starting this year, payments to doctors will be based on the quality of 
care data they provide the agency. No data means no payment, Granger said.


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