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STUDY SHOWS ELECTRONIC MEDICAL RECORDS DON'T
GUARANTEE QUALITY HEALTHCARE -- Physician
offices
using electronic medical records systems and
doctors
still stuck on pen and paper deliver about the
same
quality of care, according to a major study.

This study is particularly interesting because
the VA is always touting its electronic healthcare record system, saying
it increases accuracy in every area and boosts quality of care.
They may have to rethink it.
For more on electronic medical records, use the VA Watchdog search
engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch
.php?q=electronic+records&op=and
Story here...
http://www.ama-assn.org/
amednews/2007/08/13/prl10813.htm
Story below:
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EMRs don't guarantee quality care, a review of
50,000 patient records shows
On 14 of 17 measures, physicians using paper
records did equally well as those using EMRs. They even outperformed
electronic record users in one area.
By Kevin B. O'Reilly, AMNews staff
Physician offices using electronic medical records systems and doctors
still stuck on pen and paper deliver about the same quality of care,
according to a major retrospective study released last month.
The study, in the July 9 Archives of Internal Medicine, is based on data
collected in 2003 and 2004 as part of the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention's National Ambulatory Care Survey. Examining more than
50,000 patient records from more than 2,500 physician offices,
researchers found no statistically significant difference between EMR
practices and non-EMR practices on 14 of 17 guideline-based quality
metrics.
Physicians using EMRs were less likely to order unnecessary, routine
urinalyses or inappropriately prescribe benzodiazepines to treat
depression. Researchers described the differences, though, as
"clinically insignificant," because the adherence to guidelines was so
near 100%. Pen-and-paper doctors were 14 percentage points more likely
than their tech-savvy counterparts to prescribe statins appropriately
for patients with high cholesterol.
The published findings surprised researchers.
"We are all fans of electronic health records," said lead author Jeffrey
A. Linder, MD, MPH, describing the study's five co-authors. "We'd hoped
that there would be some association with electronic health records and
quality. It turns out we didn't find any."
The news comes amid increasing pressure on physicians from the
government and insurers to implement EMRs to cut costs and improve
quality and patient safety. Only a quarter of office-based physicians
have gone digital, according to the most recent CDC data.
Only a quarter of office-based doctors have electronic medical records.
The study's finding sheds light on how little is known about the
efficacy of electronic systems as quality improvement tools, said Ross
Koppel, PhD, an investigator at the University of Pennsylvania School of
Medicine's Center for Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics.
"EMRs seem to make sense, but like almost all of health IT, right now
we're in the period of faith," said Dr. Koppel, who authored a 2005 JAMA
study that found that computer systems for physician order entry
actually can facilitate medication errors.
"We have to pay more attention to the details" of how physicians
interact with electronic systems in real-world practice, he added.
Dr. Linder said one potential explanation for EMRs' poor showing in his
study is that the CDC survey asked whether doctors were using an
electronic system but did not delve any further. He speculated that some
physicians might believe they are using an EMR when they are not. He
said others could be using lower-end systems that do not offer the
clinical decision support that health IT advocates say can make the
biggest impact on quality. Yet other doctors may not be taking full
advantage of the functionalities of their systems.
The ability of digital systems to drive quality, Dr. Linder added,
depends on how well physician practices implement the technology.
EMRs "are part of the solution, but they are not sufficient for
improving health care quality," said Dr. Linder, assistant professor of
medicine at Harvard Medical School. "You can't just take all the paper
in doctors' file cabinets and pour it into a computer and watch quality
magically improve."
Learning proper IT use is key
The authors of the Archives paper write that their "findings are not a
refutation of previous studies." And prior research has demonstrated
that EMRs can improve quality. The Annals of Internal Medicine, in its
May 16, 2006 issue, presented a systematic review of 257 studies. The
review found many physicians increased their adherence to care
guidelines, committed fewer medication errors and monitored patients
more closely.
But much of this evidence came from randomized controlled trials at
benchmark institutions such as Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston,
Intermountain Healthcare in Salt Lake City and the Veterans Health
Administration. These organizations implemented internally developed
systems, while most physician practices adopt off-the-shelf commercial
software.
The Annals review concluded that the benchmark institutions improved
quality and efficiency with health IT, but "whether and how other
institutions can achieve similar benefits, and at what costs, are
unclear."
Jon White, MD, said the new study gets it right.
"Just having an EHR does not by itself float the quality boat," said Dr.
White, health IT director at the Dept. of Health and Human Services'
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, which funded the new
Archives study. "Making the information digital doesn't automatically
let you do things with it that you haven't done before. It enables you
to do it."
Steven Waldren, MD, director of the American Academy of Family
Physicians' Center for Health Information Technology, agreed that
assisting doctors to get the most out of their EMRs is the next critical
step.
"In the past, we were all about getting physicians to adopt the
technology," Dr. Waldren said. "Now we are worrying about helping them
learn how to use that new functionality and get comfortable with it in
their offices."
Continued vigilance
Even when physicians and hospitals successfully adopt systems with the
ability to warn them about potential drug interactions or prompt them to
render guideline-based care, many health professionals develop "alarm
fatigue," said Penn's Dr. Koppel.
Robert Lamberts, MD, an Evans, Ga., internist and pediatrician whose
practice uses General Electric's Centricity EMR, said the phenomenon is
real. "It is just sensory overload when you think about how many
recommendations go with each patient and how many things we could do,
whether it's putting them on an ACE inhibitor or putting them on
aspirin," he said. "It does get tiring, but I guess the difference is
that with an EMR, if you're ignoring an issue, at least you know you're
ignoring it."
Dr. Lamberts, who has received $1,000 speaking fees from the Healthcare
Information and Management Systems Society for lectures on how to adopt
an EMR, said he sees the quality impact of his EMR every day. For
example, the system encourages him to target a 130 mmHg systolic blood
pressure in his patients, where before he was satisfied with a 150
reading. Moreover, he said, it is long past time for doctors to go
digital.
"Would you go to a bank that kept all their records on paper and said it
was not going to go to a computerized system because it is too
expensive?" he asked.
At the 2006 AMA Annual Meeting, delegates adopted policy saying that
public and private payers should not require physicians to use EMRs. A
bipartisan bill in the Senate, the Wired for Health Care Quality Act,
includes $278 million in matching grants to help doctors purchase health
information technology. At press time in late July, supporters of the
bill were hoping it would come up for a vote on the Senate floor before
the Aug. 6 summer recess.
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Larry Scott --