My dream of universal acceptance of EHR has turned sour

This past July marked the 16th anniversary of the installation of our electronic medical record.

Yup.  I am that weird.

Over the first 10-14 years of my run as doctor uber-nerd, I believed that widespread adoption of EHR would be one of main things to drive efficiency in health care.  I told anyone I could corner about our drive to improve the quality of our care, while keeping our cash-flow out of the red.  I preached the fact that it is possible for a small, privately owned practice to successfully adopt EHR while increasing revenue.  I heard people say it was only possible within a large hospital system, but saw many of those installations decrease office efficiency and quality of care.  I heard people say primary care doctors couldn’t afford EHR, while we had not only done well with our installation, but did so with one of the more expensive products at the time.  To me, it was just a matter of time before everyone finally saw that I was right.

The passage of the EHR incentive program (aka “meaningful use” criteria) was a huge validation for me: EHR was so good that the government would pay doctors to adopt it.  I figured that once docs finally could implement an EHR without threatening their financial solvency, they would all become believers like me.

But something funny happened on the way to meaningful use: I changed my mind.  No, I didn’t stop thinking that EHR was a very powerful tool that could transform care.  I didn’t pine for the days of paper charts (whatever they are).  I certainly didn’t mind it when I got the check from the government for doing something I had already done without any incentive.  What changed was my belief that government incentives could make things better. They haven’t.  In fact, they’ve made things much worse.

We first installed EHR in 1996, after we were scared by an abnormal chest x-ray that was missed due to our paper charting system.  We were afraid we were giving bad care for our patients, and saw computers as the solution.  Ironically, our success with our implementation hinged on our non-conformity with our EHR product’s design.  We didn’t care if we used every part of the product, instead focusing on only using things in a way that improved the care without hurting our office workflow.  Early on, we used a hybrid of paper and computers to give us the information in the proper format.  Then, once our vendor opened up the product to customization, I totally abandoned the hideous clinical content they had made, designing my own forms that maximized both quality and efficiency.

But last year, our first year in the “meaningful use” era, our focused changed in a very bad way.  We started talking more about our EHR complying to criteria than maximizing quality and efficiency.  Our vendor jumped on this bandwagon, ignoring the fact that they were stuck in a pre-Internet, office-network design, and instead put all of their resources into letting their users meet “meaningful use.”  In the past, the computers were a tool we used to help our patients; with “meaningful use” they became a distraction, taking us away from a clinical focus and driving us toward proper data-gathering.

This is sadly ironic.  We were once using our computers in a meaningful way for the benefit of our patients, but now we are being pressured to abandon the patients in order to qualify for “meaningful use.”  This should come as no shock to anyone who has watched American health care over the past 20 years.  We have beaten doctors over the head with “clinical pathways,” and “evidence-based medicine,” all with a good intent: to make sure doctors gave good care.  The problem was, however, that these criteria become more important than the patients they were meant to serve.  The same is true with our payment system: designed with the initial intent of enabling patients to have access to care, but becoming a behemoth in the exam room, standing between the doctor and the patient.

So what can be done?  I don’t really know.  I still do believe that universal acceptance of EHR, coupled with patient data flowing efficiently between points of care, could improve quality and save a bus-load of money.  But I am not so sure about where we are heading.  I want to use computers for the benefit of my patients, not for the sake of compliance to the guideline de jour, or the next great government incentive program.

To paraphrase a famous political campaign motto: it’s about the patient, stupid.

So I am working to somehow comply with government guidelines (and get my incentive check so I can have a better shot at paying for four kids going through college in the next 10 years) but doing so while somehow not losing focus on the patient.  I have to say, it’s a very hard thing to do.

My dream of universal acceptance of EHR has turned sour.  I am beginning to hate the words: “meaningful use.”  I am starting to fantasize about a life without it, and maybe even a life without anybody else’s definition of what the care I give should look like.  I want to be a doctor.  I want to take care of my patients.  I want them to be the most important thing, not the other people enticing me with their big checks.  Can I stay in our system while still giving care that is meaningful?

Rob Lamberts is an internal medicine-pediatrics physician who blogs at More Musings (of a Distractible Kind).

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  • http://www.facebook.com/jonathan.marcus.ca Jonathan Marcus

    If a tech head like you can’t make EMR work for your practice, what chance do the rest of us have?

  • GreyOnGrey

    dr. lamberts, speaking as someone with no financial interest in the matter, i don’t understand the issue, here. is your vendor spending more time than you’d like on peddling the meaningful use data structure, or are you spending more of your own time trying to meet the mandate than you’d like to? if so, wouldn’t a contrarian say, “just get over the hump and get back to doing what you did before as quickly as possible?” meaningful use has an enormous MACRO potential in that it harmonizes clinical data across disparate EHR systems, thus allowing for the multi-site application of algorithms to analyze such important variables as readmission rates and other decision support initiatives. unless i’ve missed your point, your article addresses a small subset of a MICRO issue; a tactical snag, if you will, or ostensibly just a transient inconvenience towards a greater goal. paradoxically, these were the same philosophical obstacles that EHR proponents fought so hard to dismiss to naysayers, in the first place.

    • joethep

      One should not be so dismissive of “transient inconveniences” or “tactical snags” at the micro level. Many initiatives that have promised enormous macro gains have failed spectacularly because they discount the importance of micro incentives and activities. The devil is in the details, and all of that stuff. This is particularly acute in situations where the recipients of the macro benefits are different from those who bear the burden of implementing changes at the micro level. These are real-world, practical issues that show up in large projects in many industries, not just healthcare.

      PS. Thank you for capitalizing “micro” and “macro”. It made it so much easier for the rest of us to appreciate your argument. Perhaps in the future, you might consider capitalizing the first letter of each sentence, too. Then, we’ll be truly impressed!

      • GreyOnGrey

        sorry, that won’t work well as a rebuttal. for starters, EHR was an initiative that promised enormous micro gains and which is now undergoing macro harmonization specifically due to that “micro” shortsightedness. you’ve got it reversed. “meaningful use” is not an initiative, in the pure sense of the word. it’s a calibration exercise. also, to suggest that the recipients of the benefits are different than those who “bear the burden” is incredibly insensitive. do you understand what meaningful use standardization can actually do? it may facilitate longitudinal analysis in ways that were previously reserved for NIH initiatives like the Framingham Heart Study. you don’t think docs will benefit from learning of better-analyzed readmission rates? EHR needs harmonization – badly. this argument is not complete without introducing the subject of operator proficiency in such an IT system. if a doc can’t negotiate his way through this, then let him seek assistance.

        PS – save the vitriol.

        • DavidBehar

          You will not supervise the doctor second by second via metadata.

        • joethep

          I used tongue-in-cheek sarcasm in my postscript, not vitriol. Save the condescension, and you will probably receive less of each.

    • rswmd

      It may shock you, but a sick patient and the doctor treating that patient don’t give a damn about the “enormous MACRO potential.”

      • GreyOnGrey

        oh yes they do. everyone gives a damn. explain to me how an informed doctor wouldn’t care about this. explain to me how an informed patient would agree.

    • http://doctor-rob.org/ Dr. Rob

      When I first posted this article, one of the heads of ONC (the ones in charge of meaningful use) contacted me and we talked for over an hour about this. ONC sees this as a real problem as well. It’s just like the “No Child left behind” law that makes teachers more focused on the measures than the students. I do understand the big picture, but it is not in my DNA to break my pledge to “do no harm” in the name of meaningful use.

      • southerndoc1

        Would be very interested in hearing more about what the ONC rep said. It’s hard to imagine that MU 2 and 3 won’t make things even worse.

        • http://www.facebook.com/davidmsack David M Sack

          I’m sympathetic with all tht has been said by the commenters but I think there is a level of hyperbole and hysteria in the reations to EMR. I have used one for our 3-man practice for 10 years, and because it does not qualify for “meaningful use”, we have had to replace it. After a few months of searching and 3 site visits we selected one that is set to go live in 4 days. Naturally, I am quite apprehensive. The first time around we were slowed substantially for several weeks. I put in over 200 hours configuring it, and I don’t see that the new one will cost me fewer than that. The old one has no order-tracking, so I have worried for 10 years about the lost CBC, or more likely, the one the patient failed to go for. The new one has that. The new EMR still generates a note that looks robotic, and the interface is seemingly more complex, but they both force us to think about differential diagnoses and lab tests that might not have entered my mind. They both allow me to edit my note ate the end of the day, unlike a dictated note. They both allow me to use Dragon, and I have been using voice-to-text fairly happily these 10 years. One of my partners, who prizes speed over completeness, is worried greatly he will have to slow down, and he will for a while. But he has been clicking on “non-contributory” or ROS essentially negative for 14 systms for the past 10 years and i doubt he will change.
          I am not worrying about the questions needed for meaningful use as much as everyone seems to be who is already using one of the new EMR’s. Maybe I have not yet experienced it for myself, but I am planning to have staff enter most of the past history, review of systems, and other important data.
          Of course the use of an EHR will not offer the kind of efficiencies we are hoping for yet. We will need new generations that allow me to view the CBC that is in my referring doctor’s EMR so I don’t have to order redundant studies or have my staff nag his staff to fax the reports. Of course we have a long way to go. And I know I will want to throw the tablet through the window at least once next week, as I did the first 6 months the last time around. But overall, I am still hopeful.
          And stop blaming the “government” for everything. Without “government”, we would have no Medicare and no clean water, for that matter. So o all the incensed commenters, stop all the grousing and make some constructive suggestions! The problem is not that we have incentives, but that we need new and better incentives for my colleagues to remain in primary care and for new trainees to enter it. Forgive me, but as someone who can forsee his internist retiring, I would prefer not to see a physician “extender”. But that’s a whole ‘nother rant.

      • LeoHolmMD

        It seems like doctors and patients should be deciding what meaningful use is instead of policy wonks. MU will suffer the same problems as any empire driven program…constantly failing infrastructure and endless bureaucracy corrupting any actual intention. Your point was well made.

  • http://www.facebook.com/vikas.desai.92560 Vikas Desai

    classic problem of an early adopter, now you are stuck with old tech which fossilizes by the second, you have the apple newton and palm pilot of EHR systems. The current EHR systems simply can’t do the job in any efficient manor to acheive said goals. Cloud based computing and tablet PC’s are still in their infancy, EHR can’t talked to each other right now, it’s extremely difficult to get the “meaningful use” money, and voice recognition software is still not quite their yet. EHR is there for only one purpose and that is for easy data mining for payers, right now it there is little benefit to patients or doctors. Any schmo doctor who wants to run his practice with an IPAD is screwed as soon as he drops it. Just sayin… ehr isn’t ready for prime time… i’ll be the first to adopt when it is. Right now it’s all about staring at a computer and scanning endless documents , freaking out everytime the server goes down and spending 10minutes with the patient and 45 minutes on pondering which drop down menu to use.

    • southerndoc1

      Don’t agree that being an early adopter is the problem
      Dr. Lambert thought his system worked until he was “forced” to start complying with MU. The problem isn’t the EMR, it’s that the good doc is wasting his and his patients’s time doing chores that he knows are worthless. As long as we design EMRs that are all about MU/CPT-ICD trivia, they’ll never be ready for prime time (i.e., patient care) as far as physicians are concerned.

      • http://doctor-rob.org/ Dr. Rob

        You are right, southerndoc. My complaint is the pressure put on us by the rules, which distract from good care. EMR is not the problem; it was the unintended consequences from the MU rules that is the problem. I am not sure why people read into this as a rant against EMR, as clearly I am a major enthusiast.

        • Dorothygreen

          dr. Rob – look at this. http://radar.oreilly.com/2012/06/health-it-system-integration.html. Also, what about VAH, Kaiser, Tawain, France, Germany. They have EMR that seems to work extraordinary well. Physicians have baned together for a long time under the AMA to protest universal health care. Now, it is considered necessary by most. Why not ban together to help solve the problem of EMR – let “the government” know what you are dealing with – the redundancy, old technology, greedy vendors. Don’t play the blame game – be part of the solution.
          EMR is here to stay – it doesn’t have to be an albatross. It is the physician and the patient who will benefit the most.

    • Dawit Gebrekidan

      I like this! So true and real. Is anyone listening?????

  • Jack Cain

    As a patient, I can
    say that EHR makes my visits to my Primary Care Provider a nightmare. I have
    medications ordered, paid for out of my bank account and arriving in my mailbox
    before I even know that a mistake was made. Because of the cost of medication,
    a simple mouse click can wipe out my bank account for two weeks while I mail it back and they process the credit.

    At my last visit a few days ago, I was asked to sign an
    agreement so that everyone (which was undefined and not listed) on a network
    called “IIHCS” could share my information. The fine print told me
    that information normally protected by HIPPA *WOULD* be shared with companies who
    are not covered under HIPPA and that my information could be exposed. They
    wanted me to sign this so they can automate more things so even more people can
    click a mouse and mess my records, medication or money up in a heartbeat? No
    thanks!

  • http://www.facebook.com/igabashvili Irene Gabashvili

    I agree with Jack Cain. Mr.Grey, as Dr. Lamberts said EHRs don’t benefit patients all that much. Perhaps they help to reduce readmission rates (along with admission rates, as less patients are admitted to hospitals via doctor’s office vs emergency rooms). My experience with EHRs as a preventive medicine patient is the same – I was excited at first, but am not interested now as it did not help me with my health records, not one iota. EHRs will have more sense after personal health records reach new level of sophistication and that’s what we are working on in Aurametrix.

    • http://doctor-rob.org/ Dr. Rob

      I didn’t say EHR’s don’t benefit patients. I said that following rules slavishly makes it harder to use my EHR in a way that benefits my patients. I would never recommend going to a doctor without an EHR, but simply getting one doesn’t make a doctor better. It’s a tool that can be well or poorly used. I am frustrated at being pushed away from doing it well.

      • DavidBehar

        EHR hurts patients by denying access to care, by driving off doctors, by slowing things to a crawl so fewer patients can be seen. A catastrophe.

        • http://www.facebook.com/igabashvili Irene Gabashvili

          “Columbus Regional Hospital in Columbus, IN, saw an undesired result after it installed a new electronic health record (EHR) system earlier this summer. When the system was installed in late June, the average length of time it took to treat patients in the hospital’s emergency department nearly doubled….
          The reason … the steep learning curve required to get used to the new system.”

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1624302541 Bruce Ramshaw

    Thanks for the honesty and a very experienced interpretation of the current situation of EHR use including the misguided government incentive program. If EHR’s were designed around the patient’s cycle of care they could be a very useful tool. Because they have been designed to meet the needs of the fragmented parts of our system: the hospital (with its many fragments- coding and billing, radiology, OR, floor, ED), the physician practice, etc. they are wasteful, inefficient and can cause harm.
    To add value, the software must be adaptable and designed around the most important process to be defined, measured and improved- the patient’s cycle of care. But of course to utilize this software, we will need healthcare organizations that are designed to care for patient groups through their entire cycle of care- but we don’t yet have that. So, EHR companies design software to market to the current fragmented parts of our system. It seems to be a viscous cycle of design failure.

  • http://twitter.com/rboates Randall Oates, MD

    So sad that so many are implementing technology that adds to the burden of physicians. This is the worst of times. In the future, the technology will be more properly implemented in order to liberate physicians and leave no doctor behind. The process change will allow for increased capacity to better manage larger populations of patents.
    Insanity is doing the same thing expecting different results – A Einstein.

  • PMD1234

    I am just adopting, and entering data for 80 and ninety year olds. Eighty percent of my patients are in Medicare.
    Why do I have to survey each of these guys yearly for alcohol use? I’m not going to change them. Is it imagined that when I gasp as I enter the exam room of the few remaining smokers, that they do not hear it is time to quit?
    Am I going to dry out the closet alcoholics among them? Clearly anything one could say about survival advantage isn’t going to fly. The patient who are teetotalers at 90 will still be teetotalers.
    It is taking me 2 hours a chart for initial encounters. I worry about the care they are NOT getting while I spend two hours that should be shared with many others. It is shifting work from my front desk to me, not the other way around. My colleagues and I are staring art our screens instead of kicking around ideas.
    And I really worry about the difficulty in correcting wrong information.
    Can’t think of a better way to discourage taking new Medicare patients, and in a time of physician shortage,

  • http://twitter.com/rboates Randall Oates, MD

    His methodology is an obsolete approach designed to turn the doctor into a data troll and/or rob his free time. So sad that so much of the software at the point of care is actually designed and/or intended to either turn doctors into data entry clerks and/or throw in globs of garbage into the documentation. Then, few physicians understand yet, or have the properly designed and implemented technology that allows them to delegate just about all the documentation and a majority of their administrative tasks. This will change as the need to increase capacity grows.

  • DavidBehar

    I used the EMR for the first time this week. My usually scheduled number of patients was reduced by 50%. I still ran behind, causing, loud arguments in the waiting room about who came before who.

    I had a trainer sitting behind me, but still had trouble navigating the record. I felt humiliated in accepting yet another offensive attack on clinical care. I realized the typing of the notes my secretary was doing? She was gone, and I was dong her work in addition to mine, now.

    I was being tracked to the second with the metada of each entry. Not even an illegal alien picking lettuce gets tracked minute to minute.

    As to efficiency? Sucked. Extensive personal and clinical data gathered by an intake person did not populate similar fields in the doctor’s evaluation, so the doctor could focus on going into greater depth. It made the patient repeat herself.

    Say, I twisted my ankle and am in a lot of pain. I stare at my doctor asking canned questions to fill out his form, and slowly typing for a few seconds, I am going to grab that computer and throw it from the window. Doc, I am in agony. I am not going to sue you. I don’t care if your records is only a squiggle. Fix this agony.

  • http://twitter.com/rboates Randall Oates, MD

    DavidBehar – My heart goes out to you in that you are another victim of the insanity of the legacy approach of EHR implementation that has the goal of turning you into a data troll. No doctor should now succumb to an EHR and implementation approach that does not almost immediately improve the doctor-patient experience and your capacity to deliver patient care. Were you forced or did you have choices?

    • DavidBehar

      Forced. The employer will receive an endless stream of complaints and threats. I want the metadata turned off, so that there are no time stamp on every key stroke. They have my blood oath they will not supervise me by the second.

  • DavidBehar

    It appears the real aim is to drive away providers from Medicaid, to deny access to dark skinned people. Because everyone will eventually be on Medicaid, the EMR is a threat to the entire health system. It is a lawyer scheme to take over and dominate health care. The metadata on each entry means they can supervise the doctor second to second.

  • http://profiles.google.com/wmamyx Warren Amyx

    You sir are exactly right. We have chosen the path of becoming data collectors to contribute to the governments data-repository, which everyone says will change healthcare. We have forgotten about patient provider relationships completely. Then we wonder why patients do not follow their therapies. They don’t trust us they don’t know us, they just pop in and move on of they do not hear what they want to hear.
    Government involvement rarely if ever makes anything better and EHR/EMR is a prime example.

  • John Henry

    To paraphrase Voltaire, meaningful use is neither meaningful nor useful.

  • Dawit Gebrekidan

    Seriously though- if “EHR harmonization”is so important why not dump all these plethora of EHR systems (each with its own schizophrenic personality) and adopt the VA’s CPRS system? It’s already there and you can find all the info you need on your patient from Alaska to florida. Yeah it’s not as “pretty” as EPIC and CENTRICITY but it does the job. But no you can’t because there is way to much money to be lost. Patient doctor relationship is not even anywhere close on the radar for anyone who is not actively engaged in this specific activity.

  • http://euonymous.wordpress.com euonymous

    I’m from the government and I’m here to help. Sigh. Something about good intentions.

    More to the point, we get what we incent. And we’re getting what the government requires… meeting the letter of the law, not the overarching intent which you had achieved earlier. The solution would appear to be to have the AMA lobby for modified EHR requirements. There must be a way to make EHR work for everyone.

  • http://www.thehappymd.com/ Dike Drummond MD

    Universal acceptance of EHR … that is a loaded phrase if there ever was one. Here are the major barriers as I see them. And remember the method of charting a particular doctor uses is consistently the #1 stressor in their work day.

    EHRs were designed for data entry and aggregation — not patient care. They will always interfere with the doctor patient relationship, some more than others

    There is no monolithic EHR. There are dozens in the marketplace. Each has a different interface and learning curve and they are all a royal pain in one way or the other. If there was a single EHR and all quality improvement efforts were focused on optimizing this universal system … we would be much farther down the road. Before you cry, “He’s an IT Socialist” … I realize this “single system” is impossible in our free market economy … just saying it could help.

    In a single doctor’s life there may be multiple EHR’s — all with their unique learning curve and data entry methods and NONE OF THEM TALK TO EACH OTHER. You might have one system in the office, another in the hospital and a third in the surgicenter and you are still carrying paper from one site to the next. Seamless integration … I don’t think so.

    So “universal acceptance of EHR” …. it is a lot like making sausage, a long row to hoe and we have a long way to go. We live in interesting times.

    Dike
    Dike Drummond MD
    http://www.thehappymd.com

    • Dia Vickery

      You know, in Chinese “May you live an interesting life in interesting times” is more of a curse than a good wish.

      I’m an outlier here, an acupuncturist who’s making the jump to EHR, and with no MU warm fuzzy money coming in either. With no MU pressures, I hope I can massage our chosen system into being a tool for good not evil. After reading this article I’m more than a little apprehensive of the day the gov’t notices my profession and includes us in the MU system.

      Thanks Dr Lamberts, for the excellent words of caution and thanks to all your readers for the engaging and enlightening comments.

      Dia
      Dia Vickery, PhD, LAc

  • S Silverstein

    When you write “But something funny happened on the way to meaningful use: I changed my
    mind. No, I didn’t stop thinking that EHR was a very powerful tool that
    could transform care” …

    I ask…”transform” it into what, exactly?

    All this talk about transformations and revolutions…balderdash. IT seller propaganda.

    How about “facilitate” instead of “transform” or “revolutionize?”

  • S Silverstein

    For more on difficulties with clinical IT see my recent post on a talk I gave to the Health Informatics Society of Australia … http://hcrenewal.blogspot.com/2012/08/my-presentation-to-health-informatics.html

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