Much time and effort have gone into Meaningful Use and it's stages. It has been used as the bully pulpit for meaningless changes in collecting health information for big data and analytics. It has been used more as a penalty than an incentive in the road to electronic health records. Vendors, you must be in compliance to market your EHR and expect physicians to buy it.
Doctors, in a recent article by Dike Drummond, M.D. (The Happy MD) he might be the only "Happy MD" , and it is probably because he may not run a medical practice
Dr.Drummond approaches physician burnout from a variety of sources:
1..Stress
2..Depression
3. Frustration
4. Anger
According to the Medscape 2015 Survey, 46% of doctors are suffering from burnout right now. When you survey doctors, EMR and documentation are always three of the top five stressors.
Electronic Records have become a major factor for physician burnout. Dr Drummond points out there are only three things that are essential and will focus your efforts.
1. Legible notes, for continuity of care by another provider.
2..Medico-legal importance
3. Enter only significant information relating to the visit or disease. Significant information to justify the billing and diagnosis codes.
Most repetitive tasks are built into a good EHR to be performed automatically and transparently. If your EHR does not perform this it is a waste of your money.
Only the three areas mentioned above are essential to your EHR. The rest of it is the responsibility of the vendor and/or your staff. Offload those things you don't need to do.
Go Home on time.
Whereas ICD-10 Charts is not likely to have broad appeal among large or tech-savvy providers already making way toward ICD-10, CMS' move means that now is a good time for any mid-size or small practices and specialty groups to evaluate their options for migrating to the new codes.
Indeed, plenty of options exist, ranging from 3M Health Information Systems recently-launched suite of conversion and workflow tools for ICD-10, offerings from Trizetto and Proviti.
Some EHR vendors, including Amazing Charts, athenahealth, NextGen, Practice Fusion and others are advertising that they will help customers meet the mandate.
Industry associations such as the AAPC, AHIMA and Healthcare IT News owner HIMSS, meanwhile, are making available crosswalks, educational and other resources. And there are some easy-to-find online tools for anyone who only needs to convert to ICD-10 one code at a time.
Why it's free
ICD-10 Charts co-founder Parth Desai first met ICD-9 back in high school. At that time he was working for his father, in the family's internal medicine practice, where his mother served as, among other roles, a medical coder.
Then, two years after earning an undergraduate degree, Desai moved back home before medical school, was introduced to ICD-10, and recognized immediately how difficult it could be for physicians.
"My mom said, 'you have to find us a training program to get our codes done,'" Desai said. "There were plenty of good tools on the market, but none of them catered to practices. They were just too expensive."
So ICD-10 Charts went a different direction. This spring, in fact, with about 10,000 visitors to its site and some 5,000 users, Desai took the beta to his school, Mercer University School of Medicine, and switched to a virtual private server with capacity for at least 1 million simultaneous users and the ability to add more if needed.
"I'm in medical school, my dad's a physician, my brother's a physician, my girlfriend, she's in med school. Our main interest is in helping people – especially these practices struggling with so much," Desai explained. "The last thing I wanted was for my dad to shut his practice and work at a hospital because of regulations and not because he's ready to retire."
And that goes for all of us Parth Desai !