 EHR Go-Lives Are Often Chaotic; One Area To Be Explored Is If This Go-Live Led To This Tragedy
EHR Go-Lives Are Often Chaotic; One Area To Be Explored Is If This Go-Live Led To This Tragedy
EHR "go-lives" are particularly chaotic as staff adjusts to the new cybernetic governor of care. Could the distractions have caus...
 EHR Go-Lives Are Often Chaotic; One Area To Be Explored Is If This Go-Live Led To This Tragedy
EHR Go-Lives Are Often Chaotic; One Area To Be Explored Is If This Go-Live Led To This Tragedy
EHR "go-lives" are particularly chaotic as staff adjusts to the new cybernetic governor of care. Could the distractions have caus...
 
 "Doctors' Dissatisfaction With EHRs May Be Early Warning of Deeper Quality Problems" - And Some Common Sense on EHRs and Clinician Distraction and Time-Wasting
"Doctors' Dissatisfaction With EHRs May Be Early Warning of Deeper Quality Problems" - And Some Common Sense on EHRs and Clinician Distraction and Time-Wasting
The following article was published regarding physician dissatisfaction with EHRs, referencing a RAND study on EHRs commissioned by the Amer...
 
 "Emotion, not Information" - the Lucrative Deceptive Marketing of Hospice, and its Potentially Fatal Consequences
"Emotion, not Information" - the Lucrative Deceptive Marketing of Hospice, and its Potentially Fatal Consequences
One of the real recent advances in health care, in my humble opinion, was the organization of compassionate, palliative care for people at t...
 
As 2013 comes to a close, here are some year-end observations on Healthcare IT: From the Dec. 30, 2013 New York Times article " Roughed...
 No Needle, but the Damage was Done  - A New Example of Suppression of Research about Adverse Effects of Prescription Narcotic Analgesics
No Needle, but the Damage was Done  - A New Example of Suppression of Research about Adverse Effects of Prescription Narcotic Analgesics
This story feels personal, since as a physician who trained starting in the 1970s, figuring out how to manage patients who desperately wante...
