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Episode: 405
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Title: HPR0405: Electronic Medical Records
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0405/hpr0405.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-07 19:53:25
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 0405 for Mundi, the 20th of July 2009.
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Tid's show is entitled, Electronic Medical Records.
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It is hosted by Jindic and is about 17 minutes long and carries an explicit flag
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Tid's show is licensed under a CC by NC Saul License.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15.
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That's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at an honesthost.com.
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Hi everyone, this is Jane Doc. This is an HBR episode about electronic medical records.
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I am a medical doctor who lives and practices medicine in New Mexico.
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My specialty is pediatrics and I'm very interested in Linux and free and open source.
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I've been using Linux for about a year and a half.
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I bought a triple EPC with the original Xandros operating system on it.
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And I really love this computer.
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In the course of hacking and modifying the computer I learned to use the command line
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and found that I really enjoy the freedom of Linux and open source.
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I started listening to more Linux podcasts and discovered HBR.
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And since there are hackers out there who are interested in these kinds of things,
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I thought I would do an episode about electronic medical records also called EMR
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from a medical doctor's standpoint.
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I first started using EMR when I was in training.
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This was about 10 years ago and the system was pretty archaic.
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It was developed at a medical college that I was at.
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And it involved scanning in the pages of a patient's medical chart.
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These pages were kept in JPEG files and some of these could be pretty large files
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up to a megabyte in size.
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If you remember how slow the connections and how slow the computers were back in the 90s,
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it could take a while to pull up one of these pieces of paper up on the screen so I could review it.
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Sometimes it took 30 seconds, sometimes it took 60 seconds.
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And since a patient's written medical chart is so large, often in the hundreds of pages,
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if I had a 10 minute encounter with a patient to be able to review their medical charts using
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this electronic system was completely inefficient.
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But again, it was an archaic system.
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And even now, 10 years later, EMRs are still at the very beginning.
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Let me tell you about medical records, medical records of any type, written or electronic,
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and why they're important.
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Learning how to document what happens in a patient encounter is something that takes years to learn.
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It is part of the medical training.
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Now, medical school in the US is four years, and doctors usually go through a residency,
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since I was in pediatrics, my residency was three years.
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And in medical school and in residency, you learn how to assess patients,
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and then after you assess the patients, you have to write down what happened during the patient
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encounter.
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Part of this process is to help the doctor think in a systematic way,
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and also it's a way for doctors to communicate with each other.
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It's like our own language.
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Writing things down in a medical record helps me follow a patient in time.
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And so if I see a patient once a year, I can look back and see what happened
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in the previous years when I've seen them.
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It also helps for doctors to communicate with each other.
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If one of my patients sees a specialist, the specialist will write me a letter
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talking about what happened during that medical encounter.
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Another important reason to have a written medical record is the legal aspect.
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If a patient decides to sue me, then what I wrote down in the medical record
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is my defense in front of a court, in a jury, and a judge.
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Another important part of the medical record one that doctors are not very comfortable with
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is to track.
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And not for a doctor to track things or for doctors to track things in between themselves,
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but rather for insurance companies and government agencies such as Medicare and Medicaid
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that pay for medical care, it's a way for them to track what a doctor does.
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What kinds of diagnoses does that medical doctor tend to use?
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What kind of medications?
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What kind of tests is this doctor expensive?
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In other words, there are a lot of conspiracy theorists out there.
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I hope I leave that EMR is simply a way to control doctors,
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that is non-physicians controlling what doctors do.
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Now I'm not naive, there might be some of that to this,
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but I think there is something to be said for an insurance company or a government agency
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to follow doctors in a reasonable manner.
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And anyway, EMRs are the way of the future, and that's likely to be an important part
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of any future electronic medical record.
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Let me give you an example of good medical record keeping.
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There is a specialist who my patients see.
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I refer my patients to see her because she's an endocrinologist,
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and they have special needs that I cannot provide for them based on my own training.
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This endocrinologist has been in practice for many years,
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I think maybe 25 or 30 years, and she's very good at
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writing down the things that happened during her encounter with my patients.
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She sends me letters discussing what went on between her and my patients.
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And she's very thorough.
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She gives me a subjective aspect of what happens,
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so she interviews the patients and learns, say, what kind of exercise they do,
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or what kind of diet they follow.
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And then she does objective measurements where she takes their blood pressure
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and she looks at what labs they've had that she can report on.
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And then she does a physical exam and discusses her physical findings
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and ends her notes with an assessment and a plan.
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Now, she dictates her notes.
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I'm not sure if she dictates it into an electronic system or not,
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but since she dictates it, I know what she's thinking.
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And I know why she did this plan and what she plans to do in the future.
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It's very good and it's very helpful for me.
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Not only that, these letters are written to me,
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and they're usually about a page and a half.
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I can review them in about 15 seconds.
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And so very quickly, I know what this endocrinologist plan is for this patient.
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That in turn helps me take better care of that patient.
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Let me contrast this with other specialists who use more typical
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electronic medical records and in short, when I read their reports,
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I have no idea what their plan is or why they came up with that plan
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or even what their assessment is because the EMRs that they use can be so restrictive.
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The typical EMR program uses a template.
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Templates are like drop down choices that you get to click on
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and a lot of people who are, say, involved with healthcare reform,
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believe that templates are a good thing because it helps a doctor,
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it helps a doctor to prevent making mistakes.
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If you have to click on something, it means that you didn't miss it.
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For instance, a very important part of seeing patients is seeing if they
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smoke cigarettes. If you smoke cigarettes, it affects your assessment of your plan.
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Now, I am a pediatrician and I see little babies.
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And sometimes I have to send these babies off to a specialist to be evaluated.
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And these specialists may not be pediatric specialists.
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But part of their electronic medical record template is to ask the patient if they smoke cigarettes.
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And when I get a report back from these specialists, often there will be a line saying
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the patient denies smoking cigarettes.
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Now, I very much doubt that this specialist asked the infant, a four-month-old infant,
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if he smokes. I doubt if this specialist asked the parents if the infant smokes.
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But nonetheless, since it was part of the template and since it has to be answered,
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he answers it. This leads to inaccurate medical records and also using templates really
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interferes with the doctor's way of thinking, the doctor's way of organizing.
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Again, to be able to make a good medical record, this takes a lot of training and takes a lot
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of time and a typical EMR template disrupts that organization.
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One other thing I wanted to mention in this episode, there are many, many complexities to
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electronic medical records. But I didn't want to spend too much time on too many complex issues.
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I wanted to focus on a few simple issues. And one of the simple issues is cost.
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EMRs are very expensive. They tend to be proprietary and they all use windows, which I hate.
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But they're also very expensive. Practice my size would cost about $300,000 to implement a good EMR
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system. Most of that cost goes into the software. The cost of hardware keeps going down and down,
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but the software is just so expensive. I don't have $300,000 to spend on an electronic medical
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record system. Now that being said, there is a provision in the stimulus package that was passed
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by the US Congress that provides for reimbursing doctors if they implement an electronic medical
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record system. They will give you up to $45,000 or even $65,000 per physician if they implement
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a suitable electronic medical record system. The trouble is $65,000 is not going to pay for your
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typical EMR. It will cover some of the costs, but not all of them. And nobody really knows what
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certification means or what determines if an EMR is suitable. So until those details are cleared up,
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a lot of doctors are going to be very skeptical about getting a new EMR system.
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Let me tell you what I would like to see in an electronic medical record system.
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Now I'm a realist and I know that electronic records are the way of the future and I don't
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think there's any denying that. I don't necessarily think that EMRs are better than written records.
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In a way, they may be more efficient. I don't think they'll cost any less, but if it's done right,
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maybe it'll work out well. So here's what I would like. First, it has to be Linux-based.
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I don't want to use a Windows-based system. And unfortunately, all of the programs that I have
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seen in the market have been Windows-based. I don't think Windows operating system is stable enough
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for something as important as a patient's electronic medical records. And it's awfully expensive.
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Plus, it's closed and I want the freedom to have an open system.
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There are open source medical record programs out there. One was based in the United States.
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It's been used in the Veterans Administration Hospital. And it is open. Unfortunately,
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this is a hospital-based program. It's not really based for private practice, such as mine. And
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also, most patients in the VA system, they tend to be older and they tend to be men and they're
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also veterans. I don't have any adults in my practice. I don't have any veterans and I have both
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male and female. So a program like that wouldn't necessarily work for my practice. However,
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with a good programmer who I would be happy to pay to help me, maybe we can change some of these
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open source programs to fit my needs. If you Google open source electronic medical records,
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you come up with a list of really quite a few programs. There's one called Open EMR.
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There's a GNU project, I think it's called GNU Med. And so there are programs out there that
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maybe can be used as a basis for my practice's electronic medical records. I have two years to
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think about this. My senior partner will be retiring in about two years and she refuses to use
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electronic medical records. You're going to find this attitude with a lot of older generation
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physicians. And so I do have time to think about this. There's another program called Amazing
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Charts that's a close proprietary system. However, the guy who developed that program is a family
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practice physician and he set up this EMR for his own office. And it's actually a good program.
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If only I could adjust it for my needs and my pediatric practice.
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One of the things that I like about Amazing Charts is that it incorporates voice recognition.
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It's a Windows system and it uses a dragon for its voice recognition. Again, I think that being
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able to dictate notes into an electronic medical record system will produce more effective
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medical records. Well, that's about all that I wanted to cover over electronic medical records.
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Again, I'm a medical doctor. I'm looking to develop an EMR for my own practice. And I'll be happy
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to pay someone or maybe find someone who will pay a programmer to help me develop a project.
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It does not have to be started from nothing. There are other programs out there that I think
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a good EMR can be based on. And in the open source model, what I would like to happen is develop
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a program for my practice that I could share and distribute to other pediatrician's offices
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so that the costs can be limited. Again, my name is Jane Dock. And if you have any questions
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or if you'd like to hear more about electronic medical records or even healthcare reform,
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please contact HPR and I'd be happy to contribute more. And so then, take care.
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Thank you for listening to HACRA Public Radio. HPR is sponsored by Pharaoh.net.
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So head on over to C-A-R-O dot N-E-T for all of us in need.
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