Hi Gabriele and others,

I just read an article on Time mobile site about health care records in USA 
(see below). They 
have managed to implement electronic system fully onlyn 1.5% of hospitals in 
USA and only 
8-11% had basic features implemented. The softwares between different  
hospitals do not 
talk to each other, sosts are very high to fix the problems etc etc.

I think we all should return to the original idea of Care2x, that Elpidio had 
early one. We 
should work together to have a software covering most aspects of the hospital 
computerization needs. If we all go our own way nobody will have capacity 
enough. 
I have also looked other open source softwares every now and then and it seems 
Care2x still 
defends itself as the having most features. I do not think easy solutions are 
waiting 
elsewhere. 

Mark has had may good ideas on this forum. We shoud have simple core product to 
which 
different requriments could be added easily. Like core Linux or new Windows 7. 
With fresh 
ideas and developers sticking together this project could be revitalized again.

Mauri Niemi



Hi Elpidio and all the other careers...

I've finally tested the SVN release (the 2.6) of Care2x and we (me and
my friends) found that there is too much work to do before we can
propose this one here in Italy. With Andrea and Fabrizio we are
thinking to work on a different product than this one available via
SVN.......

Electronic Health Records: What's Taking So Long?
By Jeffrey Kluger
Prescription pads, clipboards and patient charts are so 20th century. In the 
era of CT scans, 
gene-splicing and stem-cell breakthroughs, handwritten record-keeping feels 
about as 
outmoded as the fluoroscope. It's more than just strangely retro; it's 
fantastically expensive.

Health care in the U.S. costs a jaw-dropping $2 trillion annually, or more than 
$6,600 for 
every man, woman and child in the country. Streamlining the industry by 
eliminating medical 
errors, labor costs and general clunkiness caused by paperwork alone could save 
an 
estimated $300 billion each year, according to the national coordinator for 
health information 
technology under former President George W. Bush. The consensus, of course, is 
that we 
must go paperless: link hospitals, doctors' offices and clinics via an 
interactive digital grid that 
allows patient histories, test results and other data to be called up at a 
keystroke and 
transmitted anywhere. Hospitals have been slowly converting to electronic 
health records 
(EHR) for several years, but with health-care reform, at last, high on 
Washington's to-do list, 
President Barack Obama has called for $19 billion in stimulus money to speed up 
the 
process. Before policymakers can determine how best to spend that money, 
however, they 
need to know how the digital switchover is going so far and what's holding 
things up. (Read 
about why going digital may increase health-care costs.)
That was the goal of a study published March 25 in the New England Journal of 
Medicine, led 
by a team of researchers from the Harvard School of Public Health and 
Massachusetts 
General Hospital. What the investigators found was not encouraging. Currently, 
only about 1 
in 10 hospitals nationwide has adopted even basic electronic record-keeping -- 
and when you 
look inside that one statistic, the situation gets bleaker.

The investigators began by sending questionnaires to roughly 4,500 general 
hospitals around 
the country, asking about their use of 32 different features of health 
information technology -- 
including electronic patient histories, doctors' notes, lab and X-ray results, 
prescriptions, drug 
alerts and nursing orders. "We sent out the survey to the hospital CEOs," says 
health-policy 
expert Catherine DesRoches of Massachusetts General Hospital, who participated 
in the 
study, "and about 63% responded." (Read "The Move to Digital Medical Records 
Begins in 
Tampa.")

Not many of those 3,000 respondents had much they could boast about. Only 1.5% 
reported having a comprehensive EHR system in place in all clinical units. 
Another 8% 
to 11% had a basic system -- defined as having eight to 10 of the 32 possible 
EHR 
functionalities in at least one unit of the hospital. Even one of the most 
straightforward functions -- computerized drug-prescribing -- had been 
implemented 
in just 17%. Physicians' notes -- which can be confusing at best and flat-out 
illegible at 
worst -- had gone digital in just 12%. The only bright spot in the findings was 
computerized 
results-viewing, which allows doctors and nurses to call up lab results 
onscreen instead of 
having to wait for them to be delivered by hand; that time-saving upgrade had 
been 
implemented by more than 75% of the hospitals surveyed.

"That suggests that we do have a good place to start," says lead author Dr. 
Ashish Jha of the 
Harvard School of Public Health. Capitalizing on that start, however, requires 
identifying the 
main factors that are stopping hospitals from adopting EHR, and Jha and his 
colleagues tried 
to do that as well.

The biggest obstacle -- no surprise -- was cost, cited by 74% of the hospitals 
that hadn't gone 
digital. A small hospital might have to spend a few million dollars to buy and 
install new 
technology; a large one could require hundreds of millions. And more than 30% 
of hospitals 
had doubts about ever getting a return on that investment. The government's 
bailout money 
helps, but $19 billion divided among just the 3,000 hospitals that answered the 
survey would 
mean a little more than $6 million apiece -- plenty for some, not nearly enough 
for others. 
(See the most common hospital mishaps.)

Another major obstacle was simply resistance from physicians. Harried doctors, 
who barely 
have enough time to see all their patients and manage all their cases, do not 
want to bother 
with the added chore of learning a new computer system, no matter what the 
promise of its 
virtues. Past research suggests doctors are afraid that EHR could reduce their 
clinical 
productivity.

"Change is hard," says John Glaser, vice president of Partners HealthCare 
System, which 
responded to the survey. "Human beings struggle with that, and physicians are 
no different."

But most human beings can be persuaded, especially with cash. The study found 
that among 
hospitals that had implemented digital records -- which tended to be teaching 
hospitals and 
larger hospitals in urban areas -- 82% had received additional reimbursement 
for EHR use, 
and 75% got financial incentives for adopting the system. It also helped to 
have adequately 
trained staff and available tech support, which the authors suggest we'll need 
more of to 
make progress -- particularly when it comes to the exchange of health 
information between 
hospitals. Try getting any two offices in any industry to integrate their 
computer systems so 
that all the software can talk to all the other software, and now imagine doing 
the same thing 
over a network of thousands of hospitals.

Of course the larger, more immediate problem is the 47 million or so Americans 
who lack any 
health insurance or access to health care and the other 250 million who 
struggle with care 
that keeps getting more expensive and less efficient. No one would argue that 
electronic 
health records alone will fix that, but few people deny that it's a critical 
first step. "It will 
require a whole lot of leadership and a whole lot of skill," says Glaser. 
Americans demanded 
no less when they went to the polls in November. Now it's up to Washington to 
deliver.


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