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Why Preparing for the Future Matters in Health IT

Why Preparing for the Future Matters in Health IT | Electronic Medical Records | Scoop.it

Tomorrow.


That's not an idea modern society seems to care much about anymore.

 

So how do health IT professionals, who are busy planning for tomorrow, convey the importance of their activities to individuals and colleagues who are concerned only about what they need today? To bridge that chasm, you first must convey to them why your health IT activities will be important in the future, no small task considering the complexities of HIT architecture and healthcare standards.

 

And why, exactly, are your health IT activities important? It's simple: patient care.


Via Chad Johnson
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Doctor 2.0: How Technology Will Transform Medicine In 2013 - Forbes

Doctor 2.0: How Technology Will Transform Medicine In 2013 - Forbes | Electronic Medical Records | Scoop.it
Guest post written by Joe Petro Joe Petro is senior VP of engineering and R&D at Nuance Healthcare.
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Pediatrics and EHR Incentive – Meaningful Use Monday | EMR and HIPAA

Pediatrics and EHR Incentive – Meaningful Use Monday | EMR and HIPAA | Electronic Medical Records | Scoop.it
I know that there are a number of pediatric doctors that read EMR and HIPAA along with a number of Pediatric EHR vendors.
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Re-engineering patient safety through EHR, health IT - EHRIntelligence.com

Re-engineering patient safety through EHR, health IT - EHRIntelligence.com | Electronic Medical Records | Scoop.it
Re-engineering patient safety through EHR, health ITEHRIntelligence.comThe healthcare industry has received advice from other industries for its use of information technology, namely IT innovators in finance and business.
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Big Data Is Transforming Healthcare | Wired Science | Wired.com

Big Data Is Transforming Healthcare | Wired Science | Wired.com | Electronic Medical Records | Scoop.it
With the help of personal data trackers, people are measuring just about everything you can think of, Quantified Self founders Kevin Kelly and Gary Wolf said at the inaugural Wired Health Conference in New York.
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Cleveland Clinic part of presidential debate

Cleveland Clinic part of presidential debate | Electronic Medical Records | Scoop.it
President Obama specifically pointed out the Cleveland Clinic during Wednesday night's debate...
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Duke's research, startup’s mobile messaging platform meet in joint venture for patient compliance

Duke's research, startup’s mobile messaging platform meet in joint venture for patient compliance | Electronic Medical Records | Scoop.it
A new mobile health startup is bringing together industry and academia to help providers and payers address patient non-compliance.Improved Patient Outcomes Inc.
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Berwick: Debate Underscores Challenge Explaining Health Law – Capsules - The KHN Blog

Berwick: Debate Underscores Challenge Explaining Health Law – Capsules - The KHN Blog | Electronic Medical Records | Scoop.it
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The Smartphone in Medicine: A Review of Current and Potential Use Among Physicians and Students

The Smartphone in Medicine: A Review of Current and Potential Use Among Physicians and Students | Electronic Medical Records | Scoop.it

The Smartphone in Medicine: A Review of Current and Potential Use Among Physicians and Students...


Via Guus van den Brekel
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The doctors are in at IBM Research: examining ways to improve the healthcare systems

The doctors are in at IBM Research: examining ways to improve the healthcare systems | Electronic Medical Records | Scoop.it

IBM Research (@IBMResearch) may be best known for its scientists who have created technology breakthroughs from moving atoms to analytics systems like IBM Watson. But what might surprise many is the number of deep subject matter experts now working side-by-side with computer scientists to redefine how industries apply technology to improve the services they offer.


The world's healthcare systems, for example, are aging and increasingly complex. Despite amazing advances in medicine and patient care, the system is still plagued by misdiagnosis, misaligned incentives that increase cost, and lack of access to the latest information on patient medical history and treatment options.


Today, a team of medical doctors with more than a century of combined experience is working inside IBM Research with scientists from a variety of disciplines. They are examining ways to improve the healthcare system from all angles - from using data analytics for better-informed diagnoses to understanding why certain diseases flourish in some regions of the world but not others. Perhaps most importantly, they are helping researchers deepen their understanding of the industry, in order to apply technology more effectively.

In the U.S. alone, it is estimated that up to 20 percent of diagnoses are either incorrect or incomplete. In addition, there are an estimated 1.5 million errors in the way medications are prescribed, delivered and taken in the U.S. every year.


These mistakes could be greatly reduced if doctors had access to the latest relevant medical information. But there is so much medical data in the world that it is impossible to keep track of it all.


The MDs are now working with researchers to apply IBM Watson's capabilities to answer natural language queries - which it first demonstrate by defeating the world's best human contestants on the quiz show Jeopardy! - to search through tremendous amounts of both structured and unstructured medical data, from journals to CAT scans, to provide practitioners with vital information.

 

"Watson will leverage existing evidence in new ways," said Josko Silobrcic, MD, Senior Medical Scientist at IBM Research, "and with natural language processing and machine learning, it may uncover new patterns that may not have been recognized before."


Martin Kohn, MD, Chief Medical Scientist for Care Delivery Systems at IBM Research, is helping design Watson's capabilities in a manner that best supports the way clinicians work. He said physicians tell him, "I'm looking for something to bring help to me when I need it, in a format that is useful."


Via Andrew Spong, Paul Aneja - eTrends
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Why Preparing for the Future Matters in Health IT

Why Preparing for the Future Matters in Health IT | Electronic Medical Records | Scoop.it

Tomorrow.


That's not an idea modern society seems to care much about anymore.

 

So how do health IT professionals, who are busy planning for tomorrow, convey the importance of their activities to individuals and colleagues who are concerned only about what they need today? To bridge that chasm, you first must convey to them why your health IT activities will be important in the future, no small task considering the complexities of HIT architecture and healthcare standards.

 

And why, exactly, are your health IT activities important? It's simple: patient care.


Via Chad Johnson
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Social Media and Health Education: What the Literature Says | Gorham | The Journal of Distance Education / Revue de l'Éducation à Distance

Social Media and Health Education: What the Literature Says...
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Advancing healthcare informatics: The power of partnerships

Advancing healthcare informatics: The power of partnerships | Electronic Medical Records | Scoop.it
informatics for health insurers PwC brief...
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Health IT’s Role and Impact in 2013: A HIMSS – #NHITWeek Blog Carnival Round-Up

Health IT’s Role and Impact in 2013: A HIMSS – #NHITWeek Blog Carnival Round-Up | Electronic Medical Records | Scoop.it

To celebrate this event, HIMSS launched the inaugural #NHITWeek Blog Carnival to foster a discussion on the future of health IT and invited those with a passion for the topic to share their thoughts on how health IT will make a difference a year from now.

 

Some great posts on here, including one by Jen Thew for HL7Standards.com!


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OIG calls for random EHR audits prior to payout | Healthcare Finance News

OIG calls for random EHR audits prior to payout | Healthcare Finance News | Electronic Medical Records | Scoop.it
OIG calls for random EHR audits prior to payout | Healthcare Finance News http://t.co/F62XDPGH via @your_screen_name...
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Prediction model combines Google Flu Trends, weather forecasting. #HealthIT #HITsm #PopulationHealth #PublicHealth

A model using data from Google Flu Trends and weather forecasting techniques could predict the peak of flu outbreaks in specific areas more than seven weeks in advance, according to researchers from...

Via Mallory Savoie
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Craig Venter Imagines a World with Printable Life Forms | Wired Science | Wired.com

Craig Venter Imagines a World with Printable Life Forms | Wired Science | Wired.com | Electronic Medical Records | Scoop.it
Craig Venter imagines a future where you can download software, print a vaccine, inject it, and presto! Contagion averted.
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BioEnterprise : H.I.T. Accelerator

BioEnterprise : H.I.T. Accelerator | Electronic Medical Records | Scoop.it
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Debate Blurs Role of Medicare Cost Board

Debate Blurs Role of Medicare Cost Board | Electronic Medical Records | Scoop.it
Wednesday's debate put a spotlight on the Cleveland Clinic and Medicare's cost-control board.
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Commentary: 5 points congressmen missed in call to end MU | Healthcare IT News

Commentary: 5 points congressmen missed in call to end MU | Healthcare IT News | Electronic Medical Records | Scoop.it
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Mostashari at EBM12: 'This time is different'

Mostashari at EBM12: 'This time is different' | Electronic Medical Records | Scoop.it
CHICAGO—This is “a heady and hectic time” for healthcare, said Farzad Mostashari, MD, ScM, national coordinator of health IT, speaking at the CMIO Summit on Transforming Healthcare through Evidence-Based Medicine.
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EMR Monitoring Tool Catches Sepsis Cases Earlier

EMR Monitoring Tool Catches Sepsis Cases Earlier | Electronic Medical Records | Scoop.it

Sepsis--a medical condition in which the body has a severe inflammatory response to bacteria or other microbes --costs the US approximately $14.6 billion a year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Several initiatives put in place at the University of Kansas Hospital are making a dent in those numbers, resulting in a savings of $18,000 per patient, or $18 million a year.


The university hopes to take this success one step further with the use of CareVeillance, a first-of-its-kind sepsis identification tool that replicates patient information from an electronic medical record (EMR) and monitors patients in real time for the complication.


Bryan Eckert, senior principal at CSC Health Delivery Group, said in an interview with InformationWeek Healthcare that the CareVeillance system includes customer-designed workflows and algorithms to provide this situational awareness, and it automates risk scoring while finding early warning signals often buried in the EMR.


"At a high level, we use industry-standard means of replicating patient information from an EMR: it doesn't matter whose it is," Eckert said. "We're grabbing information at the interface level ... we're grabbing it at two tiers."


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Health IT's Next Big Challenge: Comparative Effectiveness Research

Health IT's Next Big Challenge: Comparative Effectiveness Research | Electronic Medical Records | Scoop.it

EHR systems are now collecting invaluable information that physicians can use to detect disease patterns, clusters of patients exposed to specific toxins, and groups of patients who respond well to various drug regimens. We can't waste this gold mine.

 

Healthcare providers are being pushed to deliver more cost effective medical care and to improve the health of not just individual patients but large populations. One key to carrying out both mandates is finding more clinically effective treatment options.


Many academic medical thought leaders insist that the best way to find those treatment protocols is to test them in randomized controlled trials. Such RCTs require a large group of control subjects to receive either a placebo or conventional therapy and a large group to receive the experimental treatment in question. The problem is RCTs are outrageously expensive. In today's cost conscious healthcare system, that's a problem.


Enter comparative effectiveness research. CER compares two or more accepted treatments to determine which are most effective. Medical informatics comes into the picture because it's now possible to get these projects off the ground by analyzing huge patient databases. And much of that patient data can now be gleaned from electronic health record systems.


Via nrip, Paul Aneja - eTrends
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The Pluses And Minuses Of Electronic Medical Records | The Diane Rehm Show from WAMU and NPR

The Pluses And Minuses Of Electronic Medical Records | The Diane Rehm Show from WAMU and NPR | Electronic Medical Records | Scoop.it

RT @drshow:  Weighing the pros and cons of electronic medical records http://t.co/XKFSjJYh #EHR #EMR includes Dave Levin @ClevelandClinic

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A Randomized Study of How Physicians Interpret Research Funding Disclosures — NEJM

A Randomized Study of How Physicians Interpret Research Funding Disclosures — NEJM | Electronic Medical Records | Scoop.it
Special Article from The New England Journal of Medicine — A Randomized Study of How Physicians Interpret Research Funding Disclosures...
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Traditional Strategy Is Dead. Welcome to the #SocialEra

Traditional Strategy Is Dead. Welcome to the #SocialEra | Electronic Medical Records | Scoop.it
Social can be — and in fact, already is — a lot more than media.
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