Ebola, EHRs, And The Blame Game
It’s time to think carefully and look at the large systems (human and technical), institutions, and individuals that contributed to Mr. Duncan’s death. Systems should be designed to protect people and prevent human errors. Certainly we rely on the healthcare system to improve our health and to protect our privacy, especially our rights to health information privacy.
Looking at the death of Mr. Duncan, the poorly designed Epic EHR was a critical part of the problem: the lack of clarity, poor usability, hard to find critical information, and no meaningful quality testing to ensure the system prevents critical errors contributed to his death and endangered many others. Why wasn’t the discharge of a patient with a temperature of 103 from the ER flagged? EHRs are one of several critical systemic problems.
Current US EHRs were not designed or tested to ensure patient safety or privacy (patient control over the use of PHI for TPO). The Meaningful Use requirements for EHRs don’t address patient safety or ensure patients’ legal rights to control use of PHI. Let’s face it, the MU requirements were set up by the Health IT industry, not by a federal agency charged with protecting the public, such as NIST or the FDA...
- Tags:
- Ebola
- EHR usability
- EPIC Electronic Health Record (EHR)
- health information technology (health IT)
- infectious disease
- Meaningful Use (MU)
- Microsoft (MSFT)
- Microsoft Office
- National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
- public health
- public safety
- Thomas Duncan
- U.S Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
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