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Survey: Hospital-owned practices lead EHR adoption

October 25, 2010 | Molly Merrill, Associate Editor

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IRVINE, CA – Medical offices owned by hospitals and health systems are the leaders in adopting electronic health record technology, according to the latest results of an ongoing survey released Monday by SK&A, a healthcare information solutions and research provider.

Results from the biannual survey, "Physician Office Usage of Electronic Healthcare Records Software," show the greatest jump in adoption rates between January and October 2010 was with medical offices owned by hospitals and health systems.

SK&A's report is an ongoing study of U.S. physician offices, featuring EHR adoption data and summarized market research from 213,500 medical offices representing 643,000 physicians.

According to the report, EHR adoption at hospital-owned offices grew from 44.1 percent to 54.9 percent (a 10.8 percent increase), and adoption at heath-system-owned offices grew from 50.2 percent to 61.2 percent (an 11 percent increase). Overall, U.S. medical office EHR adoption has grown from 36.1 percent to 38.7 percent (a 3 percent increase).
 
"It's not surprising healthcare-system and hospital-owned medical offices have the highest adoption rates across the board," said Proteus Duxbury, a managing consultant with PA Consulting Group, an international management and systems technology consulting firm. "Recently added exceptions to Stark Safe Harbor laws have made it possible for primary care physicians to receive aid from healthcare systems, or use the same EMRs, so they become the early adopters who can take the leap of faith with EMR technology."

SK&A is actively measuring the EHR brands that have been deployed in medical offices and the types of EHR software functionality being used by physicians in the office. The most commonly used EHR functions are electronic patient notes (28.4 percent), electronic labs/x-rays (27.3 percent) and electronic prescribing (25.9 percent). In addition, SK&A's survey identifies the medical offices that have not adopted an EHR and is recording their expected timeframes for adoption, the primary factors and decision makers for making EHR purchases, and the awareness of available government incentives.
 
"The results of the latest survey indicate substantial opportunities for EHR solution providers," said Dave Escalante, SK&A's vice president of Data and Information Solutions. "Most of the opportunity is associated with small, mid-size, and privately owned practices that have yet to purchase and install EHR systems. SK&A's EHR database is able to identify all the medical offices and physicians in the U.S. that represent a business opportunity for our health IT clients, allowing them to develop sales and marketing strategies and target by geography, specialty, office size, ownership, affiliation and other variables."
 
Other findings from the report:

  • Physician offices with more exam rooms, more physicians on staff and higher daily patient volumes have the highest EHR adoption rates.
  • Physician specialties with the highest adoption rates are radiology (59.9 percent), pathology (59.8 percent), aerospace medicine (59.5 percent), dialysis (59.3 percent) and emergency medicine (57.6 percent).
  • Northern (40.9 percent) and Southern (40.1 percent) states have the highest rates of adoption.
  • The top three leading states for adoption are Minnesota (62.6 percent), Utah (55.4 percent) and Wisconsin (52.3 percent).
Related Topics:
  • Electronic Healthcare Records Software
  • Irvine
  • New Orleans
  • United States
  • Electronic Health Records

Reader Comments (4)Login to Post a Comment

Gpark1018 says: Hospital Owned Practices are more effective in implementing EHRs
November 01, 2010 | 10:57AM GMT

Could the fact that hospital-owned practices are more successful be attributed to the fact that these facilities have more IT resources to lean on for questions?

Most standalone practices are anemic when it comes to IT support, or they rely on their EHR vendor to answer even the simpliest of questions.

MBNMHIC says: But, are they meaningful users of their EHR?
October 25, 2010 | 3:01PM GMT

The widespread use of EHRs is inevitable. EHRs will improve caregiver's decisions and patient outcomes. But the goal is not just adoption of EHRs, but the meaningful use of EHRs. We have a once in a lifetime opportunity where the HITECH act is funding the incentives for adoption of EHRs that are used in a meaningful way. No longer will EHRs be adopted in a health system silo, but will have to be able to exchange a patient's health record outside of that silo. It's an exciting time to be in Health IT!

skater1 says: Practices
October 25, 2010 | 11:59AM GMT

This phenomena is not very surprising as practices that are larger and owned by hospitals would want to be able to have systems that talk to one another. This is really the purpose of having an EMR and having interoperable systems, safe patient care. The ability to have information for a patient flow through the health care system is outstanding.

skater1 says: Practices
October 25, 2010 | 11:58AM GMT

This phenomena is not very surprising as practices that are larger and owned by hospitals would want to be able to have systems that talk to one another. This is really the purpose of having an EMR and having interoperable systems, safe patient care. The ability to have information for a patient flow through the health care system is outstanding.

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