Join The webinar

Be a part of this free webinar on Ob/Gyn Coding challenges and get your biggest questions answered.

Lisa Maciejewski-West
CMC, CMOM, CMIS, MCS-P

Register Now

Medical Billing Services | Medical Billing Company Checklist

The EMR Billing Specialists

  • Home
  • Services
  • Payments
  • Company
  • Contact

Is you EHR customized to your needs?

February 6, 2014 by Ango Mark Leave a Comment

Share
Facebook11
Twitter0
Google+1
LinkedIn0
Pinterest0

Tips to maintain medical documentation

EHR templates and why it makes little sense to work with them!

EHR templates are getting a lot of bad press. They are being blamed for poor documentation and reduced patient engagement.

Template generated notes are reducing patient data into a series of boxes to be ticked and blanks to be filled out.

At the end of the day, relying on templates is not just lazy documentation, but can also have a negative impact in the medical decision making process.

Missing the forest for the trees…

Point and click templates consume a lot of time thanks to the extensive output they generate. Information that has no clinical relevance, unnecessary, redundant data leads to note bloat. And a frustrated physician who cannot find what was documented during the patients’ previous visit. Cloned notes and upcoding add another layer of complexity to an already complex tale.

Templates that are not well designed can be hazardous to patient health & if overused can cost lives. The death of a patient in Manhattan, due to a template that limited information and narrowed down diagnostic choices, is an example of how hazardous templates can be. Instead of being comprehensive and informational, most EHR templates are complicated and of little use.

Which box do I tick?

There is another more dangerous charge thrown at EHRs. It is that they limit the physician’s ability to think and interfere with open diagnostic thought.

Improper diagnosis poses several medical-legal problems for medical practices.

Structured and inflexible data inputting options can put medical practices at risk.

Less rigid data platforms that give physicians enough space to explore varied diagnostic and treatment, plans and options are the need of the hour.

Limiting and cumbersome!

In a better world EHR templates will give physicians easy access to healthcare information, reduce data entry tasks and increase patient engagement. But going by the number of people complaining and riling against EHRs, most EMR systems leave a lot to be desired.

Going back to paper?

Several medical practices use paper records to document regularly performed procedures, patient history and progress notes.

It is impossible for EHR vendors to create a unique template for every single disease or medical condition.

And that is why it is essential that physicians do not depend blindly on their templates’ parameters and work within its framework.

Customizing EHRs according to the patient population, treatment options and the most commonly performed procedures, of a medical practice. Can trim the fat, save up on time and lead to better medical decisions.

Related Post

Five Common Gaffes of Healthcare Providers in an E...
11 Ways To Ensure You Join The List Of Successful ...
Is your medical practice ready for Meaningful Use ...
How to increase the productivity of your practice ...
Share
Facebook11
Twitter0
Google+1
LinkedIn0
Pinterest0

Filed Under: EHR, General Tagged With: EHR practice tips, EHR Templates, EHR vendor, medical documentation

About Ango Mark

I am an EHR consultant and work with MedicalBillingStar. I also offer Medical Billing and Revenue Cycle Management support.
I help MEDICAL PRACTICES make the right EHR choices, provide continued guidance and work at increasing their bottom line.

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Get Updates

Leave your email address here & Receive our latest blogs and infographics to your inbox!

RESOURCE

Most Popular

  • Why do independent practices fail when outsourcing RCM and billing to EHR companies?
  • Hospitals outsource revenue cycle management to meet value based payment initiatives [infographics]
  • How to prepare for MIPS in 2018 [QPP Year 2]
  • 4 Thoughts on conducting a successful RCM Audits [Infographic]
  • Experts Reveal the Unknown Facts of MACRA & RCM Challenges [Infographic]

Categories

  • 2013
  • 2014
  • ACO
  • Anesthesiology
  • Business Intelligence tools
  • CFO'S Corner
  • Dictastar App
  • EHR
  • EMR
  • General
  • Healthcare IT Trends
  • HIPAA
  • ICD-10
  • MACRA
  • Meaningful use
  • Medical Billing
  • Medical Billing Company
  • Medical Billing Company Checklist
  • Medical Billing Company Reviews
  • Medical Coding
  • Medical Practice
  • Medicare
  • obamacare
  • payer contract negotiation
  • Physician Credentialing
  • physicians
  • Revenue cycle management

Tags

Affordable Care Act EHR EHR Billing Company EHR Implementation EHR vendor Electronic Medical Records Company EMR EMR billing Services EMR medical billing company Free Physician Credentialing Services Healthcare Healthcare Claims Processing Services healthcare physicians ICD-10 Medical Coding ICD-10 Medical Coding Services ICD 10 Meaningful Use Meaningful use of stage 2 final rule Medical Billing Medical Billing Companies Medical Billing Payments Medical Billing Reports Medical Billing Services Medical Coding Company Medical Coding Services Medical Practice Medical Practices Medicare Medicare Billing Company Medicare Billing Services Obamacare Patient engagement Patient Portal Physician Billing Services Physician Credentialing for New Practice Physician Practice Billing Company Physician Practice Billing Services Physicians Physicians billing Company Physicians billing EMR services Physicians billing services physicians EHR Revenue cycle Management Revenue Cycle Management Process Revenue Cycle Management Services

Join on twitter

Tweets by @medbillingstars

Copyright © MedicalBillingStar.com 2014 ·| Privacy Policy

11517, Belvedere Ct, Cerritos, California - 90703, United States