In response to Joseph Conn's "RTI report includes controversial EHR requirement":
Great article, but it misses the vital issue that resonates throughout the original RTI report. As I commented in January (and I received no reply to my comments), the RTI report identifies a number of flawed design elements that EHR vendors have elected to incorporate into their processes for entering data into the patient record. RTI specifically identifies that the use of defaults, pre-loaded generic templates and "copy and paste" information from previous visits or other patients "could be subject to fraud or abuse."
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Great article, but it misses the vital issue that resonates throughout the original RTI report. As I commented in January (and I received no reply to my comments), the RTI report identifies a number of flawed design elements that EHR vendors have elected to incorporate into their processes for entering data into the patient record. RTI specifically identifies that the use of defaults, pre-loaded generic templates and "copy and paste" information from previous visits or other patients "could be subject to fraud or abuse."
Read More Article...
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