The Great eHR Debate

Another IT Challenge for Dentists

By Darrell K. Pruitt; DDS

I posted this on my surrogate blog (Baltimore Sun). I’m hoping to gather a crowd of town-folks to witness me send a collection of door-to-door scoundrels on down the road. 

http://www.topix.net/forum/source/baltimore-sun/T0GLLJEPSJAJJDBCJ/p5#lastPost

“EHR Debate of the Century – Pruitt vs. All Comers”

Allow me to invite you to the “EHR Debate of the Century – Pruitt vs. All Comers”

Kevin Henry, editor for Dental Economics, has invited healthcare IT experts other than me to a debate concerning electronic health records in dentistry.  I posted my acceptance of the challenge here.

http://community.pennwelldentalgroup.com/forum/topic/show?id=2013420%3ATopic%3A14917

Dental Economics

http://community.pennwelldentalgroup.com/forum/topic/show?id=2013420%3ATopic%3A14859

When I read that he was entertaining questions for a panel of experts, I hammered out twenty or so questions in less than five minutes and posted them below his comment.  Every one of my questions is a subterranean stinker except for the last two.  Those two are as sweet as honey. 

This Could be Fun

I have to assume that the other unnamed and unarmed experts are healthcare IT stakeholders, not principals like me.  Since I’m defending my patients’ turf instead of the price of a company’s stock, I cannot and will not lose.  This could get exciting.  Wake the kids.  I’ll also do my best to spread the word about the train wreck in my own way.

I must take this opportunity to acknowledge the courage of PennWell and specifically Mr. Henry for stepping out in front of the vast silent, lost crowd to offer consumers transparency at last, and perhaps just in time.  I will never forget your help in my efforts to salvage evidence-based miracles that my future grandchildren might still be able to enjoy, if we’re lucky.

“The events going on right now are the seeds of a unification of faith and honor of all thirteen colonies on our continent.  The smallest fracture between us now will be like a tiny carving into a small oak sapling, which will grow large over time, and future generations will be able to read our failure in giant letters.” 

Thomas Paine, Chapter III, “Common Sense.”  1776

OSEBD

If we are to reap miracles from Open Source Evidence-Based Dentistry [OSEBD], we cannot afford to disappoint our patients the first time out with a loser EHR that ADA President Dr. John Findley says dentists will have to accept – regardless of the Hippocratic Oath.  The interoperability that Findley does not understand but nevertheless promises the nation will never be realized if leadership continues with this reckless, parasite-infested course in healthcare IT adoption.

Open-Source EBD using trustworthy data will only get one chance at trust.  Contrary to what Findley says, EHRs are not inevitable.  It is abysmally foolish for a bureaucrat to suggest that the nation’s dentists, 85% of whom are sole-proprietor small business owners, will abandon their own Constitutional Rights for the common good.  That is being far too generous with others’ rights, Dr. Findley.

Bribing the Doctors

Until both dentists and patients trust EDRs, interoperability simply will not happen anywhere.  Consider this:  EMR adoption by physicians is going so badly that HHS Secretary Michael Leavitt had to bribe 1,200 physicians just to try EMRs.  Do you know the difference between EMRs and EDRs?  EMRs make tremendous sense. 

Bribing the Dentists?

How many dentists will the next Secretary have to bribe?  Taxpayers should be warned that investing in EHRs in dentistry is a waste of healthcare dollars until Personal Identification Information (PII) is removed from them.  What, I ask you, could be simpler than that?  “And, what about the interoperability with physicians’ records?” a deeply-rooted healthcare IT stakeholder might timidly ask.  Forget the MDs.  Forget Newt Gingrich.  Forget ONCHIT.  And especially, with extreme prejudice, forget the National Association of Dental Plans (NADP).  Let’s set up our own system, with or without the ADA, collectively fine tune it to our own needs which only practicing dentists truly understand, and make the opportunists come to us for once, damn it.  Just because physicians’ practices are so terribly infested with parasites that they cannot move into the future should not stop dentists from leading the way using precedent-setting innovation in a free market.

Assessment 

Even before Secretary Leavitt addressed the ADA House of Delegates in 2006, which Kevin Henry mentioned in the invitation to the coming debate, I wrote that maintaining EDRs with personal information is like storing bombs with fuses.  It is still earthly stupid.  So are we, the nation’s dentists, going to sit back in our lawn chairs and watch for the muddy explosion?    Not me.  I’m going to defuse the sucker.  You just sit back and watch. 

Conclusion

Your thoughts and comments are appreciated.

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com  or Bio: www.stpub.com/pubs/authors/MARCINKO.htm

Subscribe Now: Did you like this Executive-Post, or find it helpful, interesting and informative? Want to get the latest E-Ps delivered to your email box each morning? Just subscribe using the link below. You can unsubscribe at any time. Security is assured.

Link: http://feeds.feedburner.com/HealthcareFinancialsthePostForcxos

 

5 Responses

  1. About Hybrid eHRs,

    Take a look at what I copied from MedicalNewsToday.com. A hybrid won’t do it alone, but it will help.
    http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/130977.php

    -D. Kellus Pruitt; DDS

    Like

  2. e-Prescribing

    Did you know that a group of 11 Senators have written a letter to HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius and Attorney General Eric Holder urging them to approve e-prescribing for controlled substances? The authors argue that e-prescribing is an important in ongoing health reforms and is a “logical gateway” to a larger, interconnected health network.

    Link: http://www.ihealthbeat.org/Articles/2009/5/8/Senators-Urge-Rule-To-Allow-EPrescribing-of-Controlled-Substances.aspx

    Willard

    Like

  3. From this dentist’s perspective, moving data entry from the pharmacy upstream to the dentist’s office means the neighborhood chain pharmacy will need one less IT-trained employee, while the dentist’s office will need one more.

    Soon, when prescription fraud is discovered 98.4 % of the time (according to industry reports) by a pimply-faced kid at a computer terminal using a special insurance fraud seeking algorithm, even pharmacists will be superfluous.

    So later, when other well-meaning people accidentally outlaw all filling materials because of toxicity, can I also retire and stay home?

    D. Kellus Pruitt; DDS

    Like

  4. Darrell, ME-P Readers, et al.

    I know about HIPAA and that MRs and eMRs are private, but who actually owns the information in them. The doctor, patient, payer, employer, MIB or eMR vendor?

    And, with nationalized healthcare, would it be the Federal Government?

    Ethan

    Like

  5. It is my opinion that my patients “own” their records, but they give me the responsibility to keep them updated as well as secure. Everyone else can officially take a hike.

    Darrell K. Pruitt; DDS

    Like

Leave a comment