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Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Electronic Health Data Gaining Favor

By LOUISE RADNOFSKY
The Wall Street Journal
Originally posted on May 22, 2013

More than half of U.S. doctors have switched to electronic health records and are using them to manage patients' basic medical information and prescriptions, according to federal data set to be released Wednesday.

The Department of Health and Human Services says it has reached a tipping point as it seeks to steer medical providers away from paper records. Advocates for electronic health records say they have the potential to make medical care safer and more efficient. In 2015, the federal government will start penalizing providers that haven't begun using electronic health records in reimbursements they get for treating patients.

But some doctors have been cautious about changing long-standing practice, saying that typing into a computer while talking with patients requires more attention than taking notes by hand. Others are concerned that electronic systems don't allow for enough family history or fail to highlight the important parts of a patient's medical record. Some critics also cite privacy concerns.

The entire story is here.