Saturday, August 18, 2012


I have been using eClinicalWorks since 2007.  I have saved time with having patient charts just a click away.  I can make notes, write reminders, access information instantly, and, the best part, adjudicate tasks to staff with just a click.  It is truly the way to go.  Patients also love the decrease in check-in, check-out times.  They can't wait for the patient portal to be activated.
Time to implement EHR in all our practices.  
Ed


Wednesday, August 15, 2012

How Did Your Health Care Provider Record Your Medical Data During Your Last Physician Visit?

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Twenty-nine percent of U.S. residents said their health care provider used a computer station to enter data during their last medical visit, according to a survey conducted for Xerox by Harris Interactive.
The survey found that 24% of residents said their clinician used a laptop computer, 6% said their clinician used  a tablet and 2% said their clinician used voice recognition software to record data during their last medical visit. According to the survey, 28% of residents said their clinician used paper and a pen to record medical data.
Ten percent of residents said that their clinician used a different data entry method or that they did not remember how their clinician entered data.
The online survey was conducted between May 11 and May 15 among 2,121 U.S. adults ages 18 and older.


Read more: http://www.ihealthbeat.org/data-points/2012/how-did-your-health-care-provider-record-your-medical-data-during-your-last-physician-visit.aspx#ixzz23xJl2ACl

Monday, August 6, 2012


As a primary group of physicians, we will solve these issues of accessibility that will benefit physicians and patients alike.  e.l.


Monday, July 30, 2012

Health Reform Law Could Worsen Doctor Shortage, Experts Say

Although the Affordable Care Act is expected to extend insurance coverage to an additional 30 million U.S. residents in 2014, experts say a physician shortage could prevent many newly insured individuals from accessing services, the New York Times reports.
Projected Physician Shortage
The Association of American Medical Colleges projects a shortage of about 62,900 physicians in 2015, and expects that number to more than double by 2025. AAMC estimates that even without the overhaul, the shortage would top 100,000 by 2025.
Along with the health reform law's Medicaid expansion and population growth, the increase in baby boomers becoming eligible for Medicare is contributing to the shortage. Medicare officials expect enrollment to reach 73.2 million in 2025, a 44% increase over current enrollment.
According to the Times, individuals typically still are able to obtain care during a physician shortage, but doing so often is "slow and difficult."
Dustin Corcoran, CEO of the California Medical Association, said that physician shortages cause many U.S. residents to "access the health care system through the emergency department, rather than establishing a relationship with a primary care physician who might keep them from getting sicker."
Little the Government Can Do
Many experts say there is little that the government or medical community can do to close the gap before 2014, when the ACA fully takes effect, according to the Times. The Times notes that it takes about 10 years to train a physician.
Medical school enrollment has increased, but it has not kept pace with the population. In addition, fewer medical students are choosing to become primary care physicians, as the salary disparity between primary care and specialists grows.
Provisions in the ACA are intended to address the physician shortage, such as increasing Medicaid primary care payment rates in 2013 and 2014 and launching new training programs. The law is expected to increase the number of primary care physicians by about 3,000 over 10 years. However, communities nationwide need about 45,000 more primary care physicians, according to the Times.
Mark Smith, president and CEO of the California HealthCare Foundation, said that the shortage will force the health care system to "use the resources that we have smarter." He added that building more walk-in clinics, allowing nurses to provide more services and encouraging physicians to work in teams all could help address the shortage (Lowrey/Pear, New York Times, 7/28). CHCF publishes California Healthline.
Number of Retail Health Clinics To Increase
As a result of the looming physician shortage, more walk-in clinics are expected to be established in the next few years, the Los Angeles Times reports.
CVS MinuteClinic -- which is the largest retail clinic chain nationwide, with 600 locations -- will open another 100 clinics annually. Target is scheduled to open nine more clinics this week, for a total of 53. Meanwhile, Walgreen has more than 350 clinics and Walmart has nearly 150.
Some experts say it is unclear whether the clinics will create more unnecessary care, or if the proliferation of facilities will undermine efforts in the ACA to boost care coordination, particularly for individuals with complex and costly conditions (Terhune, Los Angeles Times, 7/30).


Read more: http://www.californiahealthline.org/articles/2012/7/30/health-reform-law-could-worsen-doctor-shortage-experts-say.aspx#ixzz22p7rZfGj

Saturday, August 4, 2012


As an integrated primary care medical group, we will be prepared to respond to the initiation of the California Health Benefit Exchange.

Friday, August 03, 2012

State Defends Timeline for Implementing Calif. Health Benefit Exchange

At a Business Journal panel on Thursday, state officials defended the timeline for implementing the California Health Benefit Exchange under the federal health reform law, the Sacramento Business Journal reports (Robertson, Sacramento Business Journal, 8/2).
Background
The federal health reform law requires states to launch online insurance marketplaces by 2014.
The California Health Benefit Exchange primarily will serve individuals and small businesses.
Supporters hope that the exchange will function similar to websites like Amazon.com and Expedia.com so that users will be able to choose between various health plans through an easily navigable online store.
An estimated 4.4 million California residents are expected to use the exchange by the end of 2016.
Officials plan to open registration for the exchange in October 2013 (California Healthline, 8/1).
Exchange Timeline
According to the Business Journal, it is unclear at this stage exactly how the exchange will function, who will participate in it and whether health insurers and health care providers will benefit from participating.
The National Federation for Independent Business -- which took part in a lawsuit opposing the reform law because it opposes the individual mandate -- supports the idea of a health insurance exchange but is concerned about the logistics of implementing one.
NFIB said, "The federal government is missing deadline after deadline. We are concerned [about whether the California exchange] will be implemented in the right way."
Gary Cohen, general counsel for the California exchange, said that the exchange "[a]bsolutely" will be ready on time.
He said, "We were the first state in the nation to pass legislation to create an exchange."
Cohen added that the exchange has "hit two significant milestones." He noted, "We received a $39 million initial grant and, at the end of June, submitted an application for $196 million more. We expect a decision this month."
Tasks Ahead
According to the Business Journal, the success of the exchange will depend in part on health plans choosing to participate in it.
Cohen said, "We're counting on health plans" to participate, and "when we say to them we have a couple of million new customers and we'll subsidize them to buy your product," the plans likely will consider the offer "pretty attractive."
In addition, the state must launch a campaign to educate the public about the exchange, according to the Business Journal.
Cohen said that the state is making decisions about a group of "navigators" who will help direct patients to health plans and help them make choices about their coverage (Sacramento Business Journal, 8/2).


Read more: http://www.californiahealthline.org/articles/2012/8/3/state-defends-timeline-for-implementing-calif-health-benefit-exchange.aspx#ixzz22bNQnuI4

Wednesday, August 1, 2012


Wednesday, August 01, 2012

By Practice Size, What Percentage of U.S. Doctors Had Adopted an EHR System in 2011?

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Twenty-nine percent of surveyed U.S. physicians working in a solo practice had adopted an electronic health record system in 2011, according to a report by CDC's National Center for Health Statistics.
The survey found that 60% of surveyed doctors working in a two-physician practice and 62% of surveyed doctors working in a practice with between three and 10 physicians had adopted an EHR system in 2011. Eighty-six percent of surveyed physicians working in a practice with 11 or more doctors had adopted an EHR system in 2011, according to the report.
The report is based on information from 3,180 office-based physicians who responded to the mailed Physician Workflow questionnaire in CDC's 2011 National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey.
Source: CDC's National Center for Health Statistics, "Physician Adoption of Electronic Health Record Systems: United States, 2011"


Read more: http://www.ihealthbeat.org/data-points/2012/by-practice-size-what-percentage-of-us-doctors-had-adopted-an-ehr-system-in-2011.aspx#ixzz22MmsspXP