The bumpy road to electronic health records

By Hadley Leggett

Mercury News
San Jose Mercury News

Posted:03/09/2009 09:01:43 PM PDT

http://www.siliconvalley.com/news/ci_11875382?nclick_check=1


When her father fell ill, Dr. Lily Boris faced a mountain of paper: 
doctors' reports, CT scans, medication lists and lab results, which all 
had to be carried by hand from the hospital in Fremont to a specialist 
at Stanford, then back to her dad's primary care physician in San Jose.

"It's the major problem with our current system," said Boris, medical 
director of the Santa Clara Family Health Plan. "I can go to a bank in 
Italy and withdraw $400, yet I can't go to the emergency room at Valley 
because they don't have the same record system."

For decades, health care has lagged behind other industries in embracing 
information technology. Now, the Obama administration has earmarked $19 
billion for health IT in the economic stimulus package, and is calling 
for widespread adoption of electronic health records by 2014.

Supporters say electronic records will reduce overhead, improve 
communication and cut down on medical mistakes. Implementing electronic 
systems could also create thousands of jobs in software engineering, 
hardware sales and IT support.

But while Bay Area medical experts are encouraged by the stimulus money, 
they're also cautious: Creating effective, efficient electronic systems 
will require a coordinated effort in a fragmented health care industry.

"The problem in health care is that it's still very much a cottage 
industry," said Sam Karp, vice president of programs at the California 
HealthCare Foundation in Oakland. "Just adding computers won't change 
the way physicians practice — they need to network with other 
physicians, labs and pharmacies."

California's share of the economic stimulus money could add up to $3 
billion for health IT, according to the HealthCare Foundation. But that 
money reimburses doctors for systems they've already bought, instead of 
giving them money upfront to make the initial investment. Additionally, 
physicians and hospitals must demonstrate "meaningful use" of an 
electronic system — which means they can't just enter patient data into 
a computer, but must also use the computerized data to communicate with 
other providers — to qualify for reimbursement.

At the moment, there's no common platform for information exchange. 
Because each electronic record codes information in its own way, most 
systems can't communicate. Even if two practices purchase the same 
software, they don't necessarily use the same coding database, said Paul 
Tang, chief medical information officer at the Palo Alto Medical Foundation.

"It's like you have two Microsoft Words, but one is communicating in 
English and the other is communicating in French," Tang said.

Physicians switching from paper to silicon also confront major logistic 
and financial hurdles. In addition to purchasing an electronic record 
system, doctors must buy computers, install a local-area network, 
customize the software and train their entire office staff. Not to 
mention the task of scanning old records, which alone can take months.

As medical director of the O'Connor Family Health Center in San Jose, 
Dr. George Kent has spent the last 18 months helping the clinic 
transition to an electronic system. Converting O'Connor Hospital's three 
outpatient clinics to electronic records cost roughly $250,000 and 
involved "an army of people," Kent said, from computer programmers to 
data entry staff.

"We had to cut down to half our clinic load for three months," Kent 
said. "There was a backlog in patients and our revenues went down — it 
was initially very inefficient."

Although he doesn't regret the investment, Kent cautions against 
thinking of electronic records as a panacea.

"Electronic records shouldn't be idealized," he said. "What happens when 
the server goes down, when the wireless goes down? Before, you could at 
least look at a paper chart."

To handle technical emergencies, the O'Connor clinic has full-time IT 
support, and Kent put the number on his speed dial. Last month, he 
learned that the software company that created the clinic's electronic 
records is going out of business. In two years, the company will stop 
supporting the current system.

"You make this $100,000 investment," Kent said, "and then what happens 
when your company goes belly-up, and it's not compatible with other 
systems?"

Many large health care providers, such as Kaiser Permanente and the Palo 
Alto Medical Foundation, have already implemented electronic health 
records and are seeing big benefits.

The computer system supports clinical decision-making in several ways, 
Tang said, from giving automatic warnings about drug interactions to 
reminding physicians to order screening tests. Electronic records also 
let patients take a more active role in their health. With access to 
their electronic record, for instance, diabetics can get instant access 
to blood sugar readings.

"The minute they get a blood test, it's in their record and they have 
access to it," he said. "They can say, 'Oh, I see what happens when I 
eat this kind of food,' and then all of a sudden they change their 
behavior."

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204 
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

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