electronic health records

I am not a big fan of electronic health records (EHRs), at least as they are presently designed. They are more billing platforms than clinical data repositories, easily accessible to clinicians.
Many factors contribute to the burnout of practicing physicians, which has been accelerated by the stress of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The results of the biennial 2018 Survey of America’s Physicians, intended to “take the pulse” of doctors in the U.S., were recently
Electronic medical records (EMRs) were pitched as a long-sought concept of computerized universal personal health material that would mitigate issues with access and barriers to care.
Often considered meaningless use or meaningful abuse by those who actually practice medicine, the so-called meaningful use reform legisla