IT Iconoclasts: Experts Offer Dissent On Policy Issues, Technology Implementation
Each month, more hospitals and office-based physicians buy and use electronic medical records and other health information technologies as the U.S. presses on toward achieving the goal first articulated by President George W. Bush in 2004: providing most Americans with access to an electronic medical record within a decade.
According to the latest data from the CMS, more than 190,000 providers have been paid a total of $10.7 billion to purchase and meaningfully use electronic health- record systems under the federal incentive payment program created by President Barack Obama’s 2009 stimulus package. But health IT has long had its critics, even among its pioneers and proponents, as these four prominent health IT iconoclasts will attest.
All four consider themselves to be proponents of health IT, but they rail against a tide of health IT boosterism. Their targets: misplaced priorities, failing to promote EHR usability and interoperability, inadequate concern for patient safety and privacy, overemphasizing EHR adoption, understating IT costs and overestimating the return on public IT investments...
- Tags:
- computerized physician order entry (CPOE)
- Deborah Peel
- Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
- electronic health records (EHRs)
- electronic medical records (EMRs)
- health information technology (HIT)
- Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)
- healthcare
- healthcare costs
- hospitals
- incentives
- interoperability
- Lawrence Weed
- Meaningful Use (MU)
- medical errors
- Nancy Johnson
- patient care
- Patient Privacy Rights Foundation (PPRF)
- privacy
- regulation
- Ross Koppel
- Scot Silverstein
- security
- Tommy Thompson
- vendors
- William Bria
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