
Continued Use of Pen and Paper with EMR may Provide Insight for Improved EMR Development
Physicians who have implemented an EMR but still use pen and paper to maintain certain records may help develop an even more useful EMR.
Physicians who have implemented an EMR but still use pen and paper to maintain certain records may help develop an even more useful EMR,
Jason Saleem, PhD, a
According to the journal abstract, “paper served as an important tool and assisted healthcare employees in their work” in some circumstances, but the use of paper also “circumvented the intended EHR design, introduced potential gaps in documentation, and generated possible paths to medical error” in other instances.
The team, who followed 20 healthcare professionals at the
“Electronic medical records are instantly accessible to the healthcare team,” said Saleem. “But so much information is included in an electronic medical record, how does the individual health-care provider pick out what is important at a specific time? Not all uses of paper are bad and some may give us ideas on how to improve the interface between the health-care provider and the electronic record.”

























































