Now, keep up to date
with daily feeds of newly posted stories
about America's Seniors...click on the box
to the left
Electronic
Records could help reduce malpractice, study
hints
Newswise — A new study provides limited
evidence that physicians could make fewer
mistakes on the job by abandoning
paper-based medicine in favor of electronic
health records.
The findings are not definitive. Still, they
“suggest that electronic health records may
prevent medical errors and malpractice
claims,” said study co-author Steven Simon,
M.D., an internist and health researcher at
Harvard Medical School.
According to Simon, an estimated 5 percent
of physicians use the most advanced types of
electronic medical record technology, while
about 20 percent have some kind of
electronic record system in place.
Doctors are hesitant, Simon said, because of
the cost of converting to new technology and
the perception that health insurers gain
most of the financial benefit once the
systems are in place.
Even so, he said, “there’s a lot of
consensus that it’s actually the right thing
to do and essential for our system to
perform in an effective way.”
Simon and colleagues sought to measure
whether electronic health records might
reduce medical errors that lead to
malpractice suits.
In 2005, they randomly surveyed 1,884
doctors in Massachusetts and then examined
records of successful malpractice suits from
1997 to 2007.
The study findings appear in the Nov. 24
issue of Archives of Internal Medicine.
The researchers focused on 1,140 survey
respondents who had malpractice histories
that a state database tracked. A third of
those used electronic records.
Nearly 11 percent of those who did not use
electronic medical records had paid
malpractice claims, compared with about 6
percent of those who had adopted the
technology.
However, the difference between the groups
declined to statistical insignificance after
researchers adjusted their figures to take
into account factors like physician
specialties and the sizes of medical
practices.
Meanwhile, the study authors also compared
two groups of physicians who use electronic
health records. Nearly 6 percent of
physicians identified as “high users” of
electronic medical records had paid
malpractice claims, compared to 12 percent
of the “low users.”
It remains unclear whether the electronic
records directly improved the performance of
the doctors. Due to limitations of the data
collected, the researchers could not
determine whether paid malpractice claims
declined after physicians began using
electronic health records.
Nor was it clear whether some doctors simply
gravitate to technology more than others do.
While the new study is not definitive, it
shows that the link between electronic
health records and malpractice suits “needs
to be looked at more carefully,” said
Stephen Schoenbaum, executive vice president
for programs with the Commonwealth Fund, a
foundation that supports health reform.
Researchers do know that electronic records
improve communication by (among other
things) making it unnecessary to decipher
someone else’s handwriting, he said. Poor
communication, he said, is often at issue in
malpractice suits.
...
...
...