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Tuesday, August 5, 2025

Use of EHRs (Electronic Health Records)



Those of us with a more cynical sense of humor use to talk about "treating the chart". Treating the chart becomes more important as a means of complying with system expectations and requirements and often is used in measuring provider performance. This system is very dysfunctional and contributes to poorer patient care. As such, an argument might be made that the use of EHRs is unethical because of the skewed values and consequences for patient care.


When I reopened my private practice in May of 2024, I attempted to use the Simple Practice practice management system which includes their EHR templates. I quickly abandoned most of it because it seemed to interfere with my client care rather than enhance it. I went back to keeping my own notes on paper for the most part and sometimes computer based files which only I control and designed. The only thing I use it for now is billing.


"most EHR systems weren’t built with the clinician in mind. They were built to get electronic billing information to payers and health plans and the results reflect those early designs. A study found that primary care practitioners spend more than 50% of their workday using their EHR—355 minutes (5.9 hours) of an 11.4 hour workday (see Primary Care Doctors Spend More Than 50% Of Workday On Documenting In The EHR). Of those 355 minutes, 75% were spent in the office during office hours and 25% were spent after hours. These data show that three tasks consume the most time: documentation (24%), reviewing chart notes (17%), and prescription refills and results management (16%)."

1 comment:

  1. With electronic health records often patients have access to test results, etc. before their physicians do. This sometimes creates unnecessary alarm, and misinterpretations of what the data being reported means for the patient's health status, prognosis, and treatment.

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