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Home » Business » Small-business » EMR - A Friend or Foe to Transcription?

vinfonet
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EMR - A Friend or Foe to Transcription?

Submitted by vinfonet
Thu, 30 Jul 2009

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Having a client tell a medical transcription service provider that the transcription service was very good but they were switching to the EMR. is a nightmare comes true for most of the transcription companies. So how do we as a transcription company overcome this nightmare, which could become real???

What is EMR. and how did the concept came about. In April 2004, President Bush issued Executive Order 13335, which established a new executive position charged with developing a strategic plan and incentives to promote the adoption of electronic health records (EHRs). The accompanying press release stated that "the President announced an ambitious goal of assuring that most Americans have electronic health records [EHRs] within the next 10 years." So you know as per this EO 2014 is the deadline.
While small practices see the majority of patient visits in the United States, less than 10% have even a basic EMR. Among all office-based physicians in the United States, only a minority has adopted electronic systems, and their use is most prevalent among primary care physicians and those practicing in large groups, hospitals, or medical centers, according to a July 3 article in The New England Journal of Medicine.
The main drawbacks of the EMR. system in the market are that they are not custom made to suit a certain practice. They have inbuilt variables which have to be selected. These feature-rich EMRs are best suited for hospital systems and large medical practices that can devote full-time employees to running these applications and producing reports for management and clinical use.
Dictated notes have another advantage over notes created through structured data entry. Clinical notes are intended to help organize a physician's thought process and tell the patient's story in a concise manner, but EMR-generated notes can eliminate this basic function. According to the article "Off the Record — Avoiding the Pitfalls of Going Electronic" published in a recent issue of The New England Journal of Medicine, "Notes that are meant to be focused and selective have become voluminous and templated, distracting from the key cognitive work of providing care. Such charts may satisfy the demands of third-party payers, but they are the product of a word processor, not of physicians' thoughtful review and analysis." The best solution may be a combination of structured data and dictated notes integrated within an EMR, with physicians having the ability to choose their preferred mode of documentation.

The good news is that it is not medical transcription against the rest of the medical documentation industry. Many software companies recognize that dictation and transcription play a key role in medical documentation. And medical transcription companies have a valuable asset to bring to the table: long-time clients who trust and depend on their services.

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Moses is associated with a leading medical transcription service provider for more than 10 years and served in key positions. The same company is also developed high-end EMR.


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Comments

Thu, 12 Nov 2009 at 5:19 PM, by onlinejim
Though the article stated a common drawback of the EMR that it is not custom made to suit a certain practice, still it is an indicative of a faster-paced informative epoch where capacious abundance of facts crave more efficacious database infrastructure. Not only that, it is also beneficial to both the medical service provider and the customers as it covers speed, storage, security, support, accessibility, affordability, infrastructure, versatility, efficiency and manageability.

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