Commentary

2014 Meaningful Use postmortem: Lessons learned from year 1 of Stage 2


 

References

With the dawn of EHR portals, physicians suddenly perceive a new level of exposure. Patients can now peer into their charts and uncover unfiltered diagnosis terminology or slightly abnormal lab values that may raise unwarranted concern. As a result, physicians have become much more conscientious about documentation, but most feel this is just one more layer of complexity to slow them down. Additionally, as patients discover the convenience and immediacy of secure e-mail, more care is now being delivered outside the context of an office visit. This requires a huge time commitment from physicians and, in most cases, provides no income – and this time demand is not limited to just the doctors! Office staff have the new and unwelcome task of providing technical support to patients for website problems, lost passwords, etc. All of these underscore this final observation:

This isn’t getting any easier

We realize this last point is self-evident, but its impact is hard to quantify. With every new stage of meaningful use, new requirements aimed at making care more efficient for patients only seem to make delivery of care much less efficient for physicians. As physicians become mired in regulations and visit volumes drop, care will ultimately become less efficient for everyone. In response to these and many other issues, we are hopeful to see some significant adjustments made to the timeline and requirements of meaningful use. In the meantime, we certainly acknowledge the challenges and as always invite your feedback and comments.

Dr. Notte is an FP and clinical informaticist for Abington (Pa.) Memorial Hospital. He is a partner in EHR Practice Consultants, a firm that aids physicians in adopting electronic health records. Dr. Skolnik is associate director of the family medicine residency program at Abington Memorial Hospital and professor of family and community medicine at Temple University in Philadelphia.

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