Myths and Solutions for Healthcare Reform

Enter the Primary Care Docs, NPs, PAs and DNPs

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Conclusion

And so, your thoughts and comments on this Medical Executive-Post are appreciated. Would more family practitioners, and professional medical care extenders, help or hinder true healthcare reform?  

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2 Responses

  1. eMRs

    A new study from the Archives of Internal Medicine looked at how often doctors overrode drug interaction warnings that pop-up when e-prescribing.

    I can say, at least with the EMR that I use, that it’s quite frequent, with warnings occurring when refilling medications that patients have been taking safely for years.

    I’m not alone with this experience, as the study showed that “‘drug-drug interaction’ alerts were overridden 91% of the time and ‘allergy’ alerts were overridden 77% of the time.”

    The problem is that many of these alerts were “theoretical ones and not clinical ones.” If you have too many needless alerts, doctors will start ignoring the real ones.

    There is an analogy to Windows Vista’s annoying User Account Control feature, where after a while – you just turn it off because its incessant, unnecessary alerts interfere with the usability of the system.

    WhiteCoat

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  2. The tax preference – enjoyed primarily by employees of large businesses and government at the expense of small businesses and the uninsured – promotes the purchase of low co-pay, low deductible health insurance so that most Americans do not feel the true cost of the decisions they make about their routine, and minor outpatient care.

    This has got to stop!
    Laura

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