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Surgeon General says EHRs a must

September 28, 2010 | Mike Miliard, Managing Editor

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ORLANDO – Surgeon General Regina M. Benjamin learned a few things in her old job running the Bayou La Batre Rural Health Clinic in Alabama. First, the job didn't just entail "sewing up the shark bites" – there were plenty of "land sharks" (regulators and red-tape dispensers) to fend off, too. Second, EHRs are an absolute must-have.

Speaking at the 82nd annual convention and exhibit of the American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA) on Tuesday, Benjamin recounted her years  at the clinic she founded in 1987, in a tiny Gulf Coast shrimping village – a place where clinicians, mindful of the ever-present threat posed by the region's severe weather, took notes on patient records with waterproof ink.

In 1998, the clinic was devastated by Hurricane George. In 2005, it was ravaged by Hurricane Katrina, flooded and nearly destroyed.

Benjamin showed slides of row after row of patient medical records, laid end to end drying out in the sun. "HIPAA didn't like that," she said to laughter.

Then, in 2006, just as it was set to reopen, the Bayou Clinic was destroyed by fire. To audible gasps, Benjamin showed another photo of health records reduced to blackened ash.

Upon rebuilding, Benjamin was determined. "I knew we had to find a better way," she said. "This time, we had to have an electronic health record."

Luckily, having absorbed the lessons learned by those disasters, "buy-in was never an issue," said Benjamin. "The staff was adamant."

Because, of course, implementation made sense on so many levels – enabling prescription information to be sent with the click of a button, and the ability to engage patients in their own care.

Benjamin illustrated these benefits with two touching stories of her interactions with her old patients. "I miss my patients," she confessed. "But now I have 300 million patients."

Upon adoption, EHRs at the tiny clinic made life "easier for the clinicians and better for the patients," Benjamin said – imploring that other care providers, large and small, avail themselves of those same benefits. "We have to put patients first," she said. "It is so important that we get our records in electronic format."

An added bonus? "No more waterproof pens."

Mike Miliard
Managing Editor of Healthcare IT News
Follow Mike on Twitter @MikeMiliardHITN
Related Topics:
  • Alabama
  • Bayou La Batre Rural Health Clinic
  • Gulf Coast
  • Mike Miliard
  • Orlando
  • Regina M. Benjamin
  • Electronic Health Records

Reader Comments (3)Login to Post a Comment

Gadema says: PROPERLY DEDPLOYED HIT SAVES LIVES AND REDUCED COSTS
October 06, 2010 | 10:58AM GMT

If we appropriately Deployed Health Information Technology (HIT) Solutions and provide proper Training, we can increased Productivity (i, e, medical data mining/warehousing, risks treatment, service delivery), Efficiency (i, e, medical errors, redundant and inapprpriate care), and have a Cost Savings of around 20-30% of our Annual National Healthcare Expenditures (2009, $2.5 trillion).

Please See: www.nationwideehrinteroperability.blogspot.com
www.21scenturyinfrastructure.blogspot.com
www.gkquoquoi.blogspot.com

Gadema Korboi Quoquoi
President & CEO
COMPULINE INTERNATIONAL, INC.

Shaneony says: EHR,EMR,PHI eMAR are all great, but.
October 04, 2010 | 11:56PM GMT

Fo r all the time spent on acronyms we could have come up with an easy to deploy, implement and train solution. I know of 2 right now but I m sure it will only gt eazier. Just remember how big the cell phone wae 25 years ago

pff1217 says: Comments a little late?
October 04, 2010 | 12:36PM GMT

I am all for EMRs and I am adament that all health care facilities should be opperating on a EMR system, but for Benjamin now to stress their importance seems a little behind the times. I would assume that Benjamin id familiar with meaningful use and the requirements in order to receive the government subsidies for technology upgrades and EMRs. One would think that Benjamin would have been talking about the essentail nature of EMRs years ago. I really have to question Benjamin's qualifications if she is just now stressing the importance of EMRs, when the government has essentially required their implimention to achieve meaningful use.

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