News

Few physicians use EHRs to exchange data

View on the News

EHR adoption growing rapidly; doctors still dissatisfied

What stands out about the survey results in the Annals of Internal Medicine is the gap between how many physicians are getting payments from the federal government for the "meaningful use" of EHRs and how few seem to meet the criteria for meaningful use in the current study.


Dr. Neil Skolnik

While the current study puts the percentage of physicians achieving meaningful use at about 10%, the federal government recently put that figure at more than 50%. But the discrepancy is likely explained by when the data was collected. The Annals survey was conducted from October 2011 to March 2012, whereas the government’s data is current as of April 2013.

A lot of the physicians who answered this survey were replying based on the EHR that they had at the time, which didn’t really have all of the software that was later developed to meet the meaningful use criteria. We are simply living in a new world every 6 months.

What isn’t changing is how unhappy physicians are with their EHR systems. Many really don’t feel that their system is helping them a lot, and in fact, many feel that it is hindering their ability to take care of patients.

Dr. Neil Skolnik is associate director of the family medicine residency program at Abington (Pa.) Memorial Hospital and professor of family and community medicine at Temple University, Philadelphia. He is editor-in-chief of Redi-Reference, a software company that creates medical handheld references. Dr. Skolnik also writes the "EHR Report" for Family Practice News.


 

FROM ANNALS OF INTERNAL MEDICINE

Physicians were less enthusiastic about the impact on cost of care. Only 34% said EHRs would have a positive impact, with 27% saying they would have no impact, and 38% saying EHRs would have a negative effect on cost.

The Harris Interactive study was conducted by mail between Oct. 19, 2011, and March 16, 2012. Physicians were contacted by mail up to four times. The research was funded by the Robert Wood Johnson foundation and the Commonwealth Fund.

mschneider@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @MaryEllenNY

Pages

Recommended Reading

Know your values to achieve professional balance
MDedge Surgery
Brand-drug costs rising faster than inflation
MDedge Surgery
Mobile app guides patients through precolonoscopy bowel prep
MDedge Surgery
Forecast warns of urologist shortage
MDedge Surgery
Tavenner confirmed as Medicare/Medicaid chief
MDedge Surgery
EHR use reaches 'tipping point'
MDedge Surgery
CDC urges doctors to help patients quit smoking
MDedge Surgery
Fewer graduates, more thoracic surgery board failures
MDedge Surgery
House Republicans proffer SGR fix legislation
MDedge Surgery
Feds turn to crowdsourcing for health care answers
MDedge Surgery

Related Articles