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The Cleveland Clinic Fails to Recoup its $100 Million Investment Thursday, December 3rd, 2009
For those interested in health information technology, there is now an excellent, new, powerful website about this topic called the Huffington Post Investigative Fund. In their most recent report, " Can Cleveland Clinic Be a Model for Digital Medicine?" they discuss how this hospital system has failed to recoup their $100 million investment to date. Here is my take on the Cleveland Clinic story, beyond the fact that they failed to get a cost savings:
1) Certified EHR (c-EHR) systems don't intercommunicate. The Cleveland Clinic healthcare system utilizes one certified electronic health record (c-EHR) that all doctors are able to access for free. Same goes with the VA Health System, the Mayo Clinic, and the Kaiser Permanente. Some centers like Partners Healthcare make an EMR that they put together available for a nominal amount. Note that none of these centers are able to communicate outside of their own big healthcare networks.
What President Obama and other politicians including former President Bush want is for physicians to purchase amoung a group of about 100 certified EMR systems that have an average cost of $33000.00. They want these systems to talk to each other, which today remains a pipe dream. On top of that they want these physicians to "significantly use" their EMRs in a manner that requires reporting and extra patient encounter time that I calculated to cost about $60000.00 per year. This will essentially cause the eventual extinction of the small physician office.
2) The claim that c-EHR systems "increased quality" has not been proven.
In 2006, only 73 percent of the elderly and infirm who needed regular pneumonia vaccines were getting their shots. Three years later, the rate was 90 percent, according to the hospital’s figures.
The EMR can be an excellent tool to make the practice of medicine easier for physicians. In my main admitting hospital, the Virginia Hospital Center (VHC), all I have to do is log in to get not only the results of an X-ray, but to see the actual scan. This makes me more efficient. To claim that this translates to better patient results over paper has yet to be proven, as before I obtained similar results by calling or by using their "basic" EMR with all the results available online (without the actual X-ray picture).
The only way to actually show improved outcomes/quality through a costly certified EHR is to have a prospective study using paper method as a "control" group and to actively track vaccine shots by placing a notice on all charts (like is done at my hospital where over 90% of shots are administered), then do the same using a certified EHR. Using historical controls to show "increased quality" is not the scientific method, and the Cleveland Clinic should know better. When it has been done in the past, s.a. in one Children's Hospital, when the data was analyzed, the c-EHR arm showed an increased death rate. According to the U. S. Pharmacopeia’s 5th annual study of medication errors, data input errors far exceed handwriting errors in 2005, at 27711 vs 6134. They found that data input errors introduced 22 new ways that EHR software systems can increase medication errors.
3) This translated into extra work for the doctor... to follow up with patients. It is costly to turn doctors into secretaries. Now, if they are willing to pay for it, great. The HITECH Act's $44,000.00 doesn't cover this type of extra work.
4) The massive cost of the c-EHR can bankrupt healthcare. These issues have hit close to home for me. One hospital that I admit to (Inova Fairfax Hospital) spent a lot on GE Centricity. I have to admit, their ER looks pretty with computers everywhere and flat screen TVs on the walls tracking patient flow. But does that increase quality? I don't know. They've been trying to get all of their 1,500 staff to buy a $30,000.00, 5-year license of GE Centricity. What a hoot of a profit that would be for GE, huh?
The other hospital where I admit to (Virginia Hospital Center, or "VHC") has purchased Sieman's Sorian, which cost them $14 million, shortly before Sieman's went into financial trouble leading to 16,000 layoffs. To date, we have yet to see the full implementation of this EMR. VHC seems to have lost, last year, as much as $18 million, which may have been the impetus to cut hospital admission times by an average of some 3-4 days per admission. What does this do to the actual quality of patient care when I have to discharge a patient on IV antibiotics who needs to give himself the antibiotics for 8 of the planned 10 days? Will the Sorian EMR help him if he has an acute drug reaction at home without anyone to turn to? Or how about if the hospital closes its doors, like what the other 3 hospitals have had to do in the past 10 years—what does that do to "quality" of healthcare in Arlington, VA when there are no local hospitals left to care for the citizens of the town?
The take home message is that c-EHR systems will not only fail to save money, but may actually increase costs tremendously, overburdening an already bloated troubled healthcare system. C-EHR systems have not been demonstrated in a truly objective manner to decrease errors and increase quality, and in some studies, have shown exactly the opposite. If our elected officials want physicians and hospitals to invest into the c-EHR propaganda, we need further studies and proof that in their respective environments’ costly, workflow disrupting c-EHR systems really are worth the investment.
COMMENTS
Richard Lenon - December 8, 2009 - 12:31:43 (CST) Efforts to facilitate data entry seem to increase the risk of poor quality information in the record. Templates can be clicked into the record without being read carefully; or maybe somebody decides it's close enough. Pick lists have the same problem; they spare us typing, but what if we can't find the option we want? Close enough suffices. Templates and picklists can give great demo, but real patients often don't fit. Medication lists are very easy to bring forward... maybe the intent is there to review them with the patient, but all to often it doesn't happen.
Some years ago I saw a medical records system that included all the hardware and software, and wanted only half the increment in your billing. Your billing incremented because they prompted for stuff that would support upcoding. Don't tell Obama. David Lubin, MD - March 5, 2010 - 10:48:53 (CST) As Editor of the Hillsborough County Medical Association's BULLETIN, I covered the exact points above in a 3 part series why I thought EMRs would fail. The lack of communicability, tremendous expense, and no proof that quality of care would improve are reiterated here. There are hundreds of companies marketing EMR systems, including Walmart/Sam's, and who can prove that some are not in it just for a fast buck. And what exactly does "meaningful use" mean? The US Gov't wants to decrease Medicare reimbursement by 21%, and ALSO wants physicians to spend 10s of thousands of dollars for a records' system that most likely will not increase productivity, but add to the overhead of medical practices. And what happens in 3 years when EMRs are mandated and the AMA comes out with ICD10, increasing the number of codes 10 fold? Primary care doctors in their 60s and 70s will retire, leaving current patients, and possibly the 30 million or so who will have insurance if President Obama gets his Healthcare plan passed, looking for access to care. It won't help to have insurance affordable to the populace if you still get the same inferior product from the insurance companies: formularies, denials of diagnostics tests and procedures, decreased reimbursement, more and more paperwork, and what I like to refer to as the Hassle Factor.
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 Alberto Borges, MD Alberto Borges, MD, is in private practice and is an assistant clinical professor of medicine at The George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences in Washington, DC. Check out his website at http://msofficeemrproject.com.
The opinions expressed in this blog do not necessarily reflect those of HCPLive.
If you like what Dr. Borges has to say, make sure to read his print column of The HIT Realist published in MDNG.
The HIT Realist Alberto Borges, MD Discuss topics relevant to health information technology, especially as they relate to the use of EMR/EHR, from programming to politics.
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