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WSJ wrong – we need IT

Pushing ahead to digitalize healthcare

Warning!  I am a practicing doctor who sees real patients using an Electronic Medical Record (EMR).  My sole agenda is to provide the best patient care.  I have no financial stake in Information Technology (IT).  However, unlike the editorial board at the Wall Street Journal (WSJ), Mr. Stephen Soumerai of Harvard or Mr. Ross Koppel of the University of Pennsylvania, I have actually used digital patient records for over a decade and I have news for them;  EMRs work.

In a reactionary opinion in the Wall Street Journal entitled “A Major Glitch for Digitized Health-Care Records,” the authors expanded to the point of silliness the conclusions of a review of healthcare IT by McMaster University.  The McMaster analysis abstracts data from 36000 studies over five decades of healthcare IT and concludes that computerization has yet to save dollars nor improve health care.  WSJ editorialists proposed that the concept of a common medical database has “already failed” as is “common knowledge.”  While they portend to “fully share the hope” in the success of a computerized healthcare system they express doubt as to “why are we pushing ahead to digitalize.”

The question is so ridiculous as to barely require an answer.  We are pushing ahead to digitalize because the healthcare industry, which is 18% of our GDP, is the last major industry to go electronic.  Despite how critical medicine is to our citizen and nation’s vitality, health care is most often documented with paper and ink.  Can you imagine any other industry where this would be acceptable?  Would you go to a bank where they use a hand-written ledger?  Travel on an airplane without GPS, fly by wire technology or a minimum of three computers?  Do you yearn for rotary phones?  Credit cards left paper money behind decades ago and will soon move on to the next phase, pay by smart-phone. The world is digital and one of the core problems with medical care is its failure to follow.

The average doctor writes his notes on parchment and scribbles orders on contact paper.  He wastes time writing prescriptions by hand that cannot be read and will produce unneeded drug interactions and side effects.  The data on billions of health care events cannot be mined, monitored, analyzed or improved, because it is not digital.   Millions of hours are wasted, billions of dollars vanish and tens of thousands die because of preventable medical complications, the result of massive variation in quality and safety.  We are doomed because we cannot access or evaluate most medical care data; “If you can not measure it, you can not manage it.”

Taking health digital is key to fixing and affording care.  Standard, unified medical records will significantly decrease the risk of providing unneeded or dangerous medical care.  Massive efficiencies will result by reducing duplication, speeding communication and reduction in waste (and fraud).  Critical improvements will follow the use of guidelines to study clinical databases and drive quality. This means that whether one lives in Manhattan, in the mountains of Tennessee or potentially deep in Africa, the finest care will be possible. 

How do I know this to be true?  Our practice of seven doctors and three nurse practitioners was an early EMR adapter.  We put in our first basic system in 2000, upgraded three times and have been fully electronic for four years.  This has resulted in marked efficiencies and obvious quality improvement. Encrypted electronic records cannot be lost, are unlikely to be stolen and are always available from anywhere.  Ordering tests is instantaneous, as is reviewing results, organizing treatments, scheduling appointments or communication with outside health providers. On the cost side we reduced non-clinical staff by more than 50% and in an account receivable analysis our billing cycle dropped more than 60% and bad debt fell to low single digits. 

Today in the office, I saw four new patients.  Without assistance of clerical staff and without leaving my desk I reviewed their entire surgical, laboratory, pathological, and radiologic records.  By the time, I entered the room to meet each of them a significant part of their medical history was entered into our EMR, based on outside records, so that the care and observations of previous doctors was not forgotten. Half way through each visit documentation of their history and physical exam was complete, leaving more time to talk with each patient.  Tests were ordered, treatments scheduled, disability letters printed, medications e-scripted, instructions created and follow-up appointments setup.  The patients were given codes to electronically access their records from home.  Letters were sent online to referring doctors, as well as any clinicians we were consulting in that patient's care.  Billing was complete before each patient got to the parking lot. Such is the power, efficiency and quality of electronic medical records.

This is just the beginning.  Although EMRs now provide assistance with basic medical care, such as scheduling flu shots, identifying drug interactions, and health screening reminders, future systems will use academic information to assist the doctor in making diagnoses and planning treatments.   Seamless with the EMR will be computer augmentation to create differential diagnoses and recommend treatment alternatives.  In oncology alone there are almost 50,000 articles published each year; Artificial intelligence integration with the clinical EMR will help every doctor penetrate that massive database on a continuous basis as it applies to individual patients.

So, why does the McMaster study not show this obvious benefit? It comes to four factors. The first is the “five decades” of study reviewed by the Canadian authors.  Since most doctors did not start adapting EMRs until 3 years ago, that leaves 57 months of irrelevant data.  Second, we have not reached the critical mass to achieve broad system efficiencies, as hospitals and doctors are still figuring out how to incorporate the technology into their daily practice, and less than 50% of health care providers have converted to EMRs.   Third, we do not yet have a universal common database for medical records. This is a complex technological step, which has been achieved in major industries such as banking, but still must be assembled in medicine.  Finally, as was correctly stated in the WSJ Op-Ed piece, present EMRs are cumbersome, immature, and several generations short of perfection.  However, these are expected problems when implementing disruptive evolving technology in the complex changing health market. Challenge is a weak argument for giving up and bringing back the fountain pen.

I am not certain what the goal of Sommeri and Koppel was in writing this piece, they offer nothing but “hope.”  The Journal has been a strong supporter of business technology leading the drive towards quality, and has long recognized the positive contribution of IT to industry.   Those of us in the trenches, putting EMRs in place, ironing out the kinks, know that Electronic Medical Records are now and they are the future.  With IT at the core of the healthcare renaissance we can make medicine cost efficient, producing quality second to none.

 

As published in Sunrise Rounds.

 

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Chris Welch September 26, 2012 at 02:54 pm
@ Maryann - I've worked in healthcare for 17 years. No president, (including Obama) has anything to say about us getting raises. Never have, never will.
Sure decisions they make can have an impact on the operating costs, but that's it. If he truely said that, add it to the "stupid crap Presidents say" video and leave it at that.
Maryanne September 26, 2012 at 03:00 pm
That is the exactly the point I was trying to make. Obama says "stupid crap" on a daily basis to stay in power while the real world watches costs go up and jobs get lost. Obama did in fact say healthcare costs would go down and we could have raises. Thanks for helping deliver the message!!
Bob Griffiths September 26, 2012 at 03:29 pm
Maryanne, I assume from your comments you work in health care, if you are an RN, I can fully understand your frustration. Over the past 10 or 15 years Nursing salaries have been going down, with more nurses on per diem, with no job security and no benefits, the rate can be OK but not dependable. Many feel that Nursing has taken the brunt of the impact as hospitals pass on the loss from indigent care and unpaid bills from the uninsured. As the Affordable Care Act is phased in it will delete those claims for the uninsured and ensures payment for services for every patient making health care more profitable for everyone.
John Jay September 26, 2012 at 03:32 pm
I have a right to be left alone. It doesn't matter if I am a billionaire, working-class, or not a dime to my name.
American citizens should not be forced to submit medical information about themselves against thier will. This is government coercion at its worst because it forces people to submit their most private information of all: personal medical information. We are going to need to have massive resistance to Obamacare -- and vote out any politician Rep. or Dem. who supports this tax on working Americans.
John Jay September 26, 2012 at 03:59 pm
Wait until the IRS starts using heavily-armed SWAT-like teams to raid the homes of citizens who do not comply (knowingly or unknowingly) with the Obamacare law.
It will be sad, but it will not suprise me when federal agents kill citizens over their Obamacare "taxes" during the course of a raid. How will the IRS know all about you? The federal government will have access to your EMRs! They will be Nazi Gestapo on sterioids, folks. Check out some of the many abuses "militarized" federal agents have recently committed. The craziest was the man whose home was raided by a SWAT team because his estranged wife did not pay her student loans. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/john-w-whitehead/swat-team-mania-the-war-a_b_875967.html
Chris Welch September 26, 2012 at 04:01 pm
@ Bob, "As the Affordable Care Act is phased in it will delete those claims for the uninsured and ensures payment for services for every patient making health care more profitable for everyone."
How do you figure this ? Where is the money coming from to cover services provided to the uninsured ?
Bob Griffiths September 26, 2012 at 04:18 pm
The objective is to provide affordable health care coverage to individuals and small businesses by utilizing health insurance exchanges and a public option. Competition drives down price.
Chris Welch September 26, 2012 at 04:25 pm
You didn't answer my question.
How does it address the 30 million American citizens (according to CBO estimates) that still will not have health coverage by 2022 ? And I wrote "American citizens" because you can add another 12-15 million illegals onto that number. That comes straight from the CBO report on the AMA. http://cbo.gov/sites/default/files/cbofiles/attachments/43472-07-24-2012-CoverageEstimates.pdf
Chris Welch September 26, 2012 at 06:08 pm
If talking facts and dispelling ignorant myths (spread for political gain) is being mean. Then guilty as charged.
Maryanne September 26, 2012 at 07:04 pm
Huh? Competition like free markets drives down prices? Oh my, did you just say that? Why didn't the insurance companies just open up across state lines? I'm still trying to understand how adding 10million of the 40million uninsured drives down costs? All data shows costs are the problem and EMR and Obamascare will not drive costs down. It's a great goal to insure everyone just like it was a great idea to allow everyone to buy a house whether they could afford it or not.
Maryanne September 26, 2012 at 07:08 pm
Bob how does the government ensure payments? You mean like borrowing from China to pay them? Yes, I do work in healthcare. Nursing salaries like everyone else in a legitimate business that needs to make money has taken a hit. You know what the number one impact to salaries is???? Increased costs for healthcare. #2 pension expenses. Sounds kinda like the same issues facing governments who until recently could just raise and raise our taxes.
Spooner September 26, 2012 at 07:40 pm
Maryanne- what insurance/state rights world do you live. . .open up across state lines. . .hey you'd better go read the fine print before you give anymore of those one liners...States and the insurance businesses that operate there would than have competition. . .This was the same argument when they proposed unemployment insurance in Wisconsin way back during the depression. . .where people would gravitate to Wisconsin for the insurance, while the employers would be at a competitive disadvantage having to pay for it.
Uncle Moe September 27, 2012 at 02:30 am
Repeal Obamacare. Nobody should be forced to purchase ANY insurance. I for one am proudly uninsured and practice natural and herbal remedies, which dont cause cancer like chemotherapy
KC September 28, 2012 at 05:37 am
Wow Bob G, I didn't know this. I seriously didn't. I can agree with the doctor's well drafted arguements for technology, but also see your point. I plain and simply do not think social security numbers belong on a medical records.
This may be a very good reason to end the unreasonable amount of outsourcing that is happening especially while so many of our own Americans go jobless or underemployed - something the medical people know little of being a service even the one percent are in need of. This is a true dilemma.
KC September 28, 2012 at 05:44 am
Maybe also a little off point but I have a story here. I once went to a local dermatologist. My insurance co-pay was thirty dollars for a specialist. I gave the assistant at the desk thirty dollars and she told me, "We do not accept cash". When I asked how they could not accept cash as I did not have my check book she told me it was because someone in the office was stealing the cash and proceeded to ask for a credit card. I asked her - "you don't trust your employees with cash, but I am supposed to trust them with my credit card number? No dice - take the cash now - or I will mail you the co-pay." I might add I have gone to this practice over a twenty five year time period!
KC September 28, 2012 at 05:53 am
It is absolutely a necessity to have IT's where you have computers. Networked systems are altogether different than stand alone PCs. What if you are in a tough situation and the computer crashes. Will the doc know what to do w.o the drop down menus.? There is just so much information - too much information that we all need anymore. The recent security breach of the major banks stands as a warning I think. If evil doers can freeze people's bank accounts couldn't they concievably alter or delete imperative information on a medical record? It is scary to think of the potential for abuse. Still the technology is a wonderful tool for connecting people to good doctors and treatments and as organizational tools.
KC September 28, 2012 at 06:00 am
Geez Moe if it will get rid of some of this identity theft and voluminous paper work I think some of us would volunteer for the chip.
KC September 28, 2012 at 06:05 am
I just spent the entire night combing through a medical insurance comparison chart for my daughter - a young professional who switched jobs. You need a Philadlphia lawyer to pick an insurance plan! She at least has coverage I think - but am not sure with all of the loopholes and whatifs. Still not sure what plan offers what after spending considerable time.
KC September 28, 2012 at 06:09 am
Joe, Chis I have a sister who was not long ago diagnosed with light chain myeloma. It is a form of cancer. Can you believe her husband's insurance ( Parks Department City of New York employee for twenty five years) his insurance said " Chemotherapy - Noncoverable Expense." This is happening to people and it is very real. You may think you have insurance until you need it and then you find out. You may only think you have insurance. I swear to you this is the gospel truth.
KC September 28, 2012 at 06:27 am
Who mucked the entire thing up was not the docs or the insurance companies, or Obama it was the creep lawyers. As soon as you got the creep lawyers involved in things it all went haywire. I remember paying fifteen dollars to see a doctor and five dollars to get prescribed meds. I ususally had ten bucks left for some chicken soup and went home to sleep. Now forget about it. The system is broken and the litigeous ones are to blame.
John Jay September 28, 2012 at 09:01 am
I have to disagree with KC regarding who "mucked" healthcare -- it was the moment the government, under LBJ, stuck his dirty fingers into it. All of the promises of "lower cost" and that it was for "the children"...blah, blah, blah.
The government has been feeding on us like a swarm of blood-sucking tics. The scary thing is that there are millions of people out there who surrendered their liberty in exchange for sub-standard "government" care.
Bob Griffiths September 28, 2012 at 12:11 pm
It is my opinion, that there is a “big lie” being perpetrated upon the American people when it comes to our “expectation” of privacy regarding our health and medical records.
In addition, although much is made of HIPAA privacy regulations they mean little if HIPAA allows our private medical records to be transmitted outside the U.S to be downloaded to a PC in Mumbai, India so it can be transcribed by a foreign transcriptionist. I think it is ridiculous and disengenuous for a hospital or health care provider here in the U.S. to have a patient sign a pile of HIPAA privacy forms but then turn around and transmit that same private information to Mumbai, India, or Pakistan, or Indonesia. Now I am fully aware that Hospitals and health providers will become very defensive if you bring up the outsourcing of our medial records; the health care provider will assure us that the proper HIPAA “business agreement” forms are on file and everything is being done to protect a patients privacy, but that is like assuring us that you are doing everything to prevent forest fires but at the same time you are walking around with a torch in yor hand, your actions are generating the threat.
Barney September 28, 2012 at 12:21 pm
Interesting theories Bob. I bet you you were side by side with Al Gore when LIBS still believed and tried convincing other sheep the earth was flat and global warming was something was created by conservatives. Al Gore made lots of money from teaching sheep those classes.
You lost all credibility with your recent 7th grade level write up.
Ben Dover September 28, 2012 at 12:49 pm
So far the data shows that EMR costs have driven up the cost of healthcare. Obamacare has driven up the costs of healthcare. adding millions more to the system are driving up the costs for healthcare.
What happened to trying to solve the problem of rising costs? All the government is doing is placating more people and forcing the rest to pay more. Did you hear Sears is going to stop paying for healthcare and instead give employees an amout that they can they spend. This is the only way they can cap their exposure and remain in business. More and more companies have also capped their contribution. Why is that??? Maybe Bob can enlighten us all on how much our local school systems will see their healthcare costs rise this year and since we know we pay for that via property taxes how much that is going to cost us on top of paying for our own increases.
marylou September 28, 2012 at 01:00 pm
Good for youBut,what happens if hyou have an accident and they rush you to the ER unconcious?Who pays for that?I have no problem with you being uninsured as long as you pay for your own care,and do apply for charity care.Just bear in mind even the heathiest people break bones,have cateracts and contract disases.
John Jay September 28, 2012 at 01:41 pm
Remove the 30 million illegal immigrants that are breaking the financial backs of hospitals will allow poor American citizens to receive better care. This is not a statement to be mean, this is a statement of fact.
I choose to use the 30 million number because I distrust the Obama administration's "estimate" of about 11 million. They don't want to admit the real numbers that are causing undue burdens to hospitals and other groups that must provide "services" for illegals. Would any other nation tolerate the situation the United States faces today? Be honest with yourselves and demand that whoever "runs" Washington to correct this situation.
Spooner September 28, 2012 at 02:59 pm
There was the "single payer" plan that would have lowered cost and no IRS penalty, since it would operate like SSI & Medicare, but the insurance lobby didn't want that. . .I wonder why!
Ben Dover September 28, 2012 at 03:05 pm
How would it have lowered costs?
Just like SS and Medicare??? Medicare/Medicaid spends $800B and takes in $200B. Any plan with borrowed funds from China will sound good. http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/budget/fy2013/assets/tables.pdf SS spending in 2012 = $773b. Revenue = $566B. Contribution to budget deficit in 2012 = $200+ B. Interest costs to borrow $200B for SS = $40B
Spooner September 28, 2012 at 03:51 pm
"Single payer" would leave out the middle men. . .the insurance companies, so instead of insurance companies tacking on their costs. . .those costs would not be there. . .and also as a "single payer" plan they would be in an even stronger position to control costs. As for your Medicare point: I'm not getting into that because for one, you have to look at medical care in this country to start off with. There was an interesting documentary on PBS comparing two approaches to medical care. One hospital promoted expenses, while the other used a more rational common sense approach to medical treatment, at much lower cost. Something like the ObamaCare panel propaganda...making death decisions, versus keeping somebody alive?
marylou September 28, 2012 at 05:36 pm
'do NOT" apply for charity care...

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