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Peril to patients seen in EHR firms’ ‘gag clauses’

 

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Politico reports that that some of the biggest electronic health record companies have inserted “gag clauses” in their taxpayer-subsidized contracts. These clauses effectively bar healthcare providers from “talking about glitches that slow their work and potentially jeopardize patients.”

The news service reports that “Vendors say such restrictions target only breaches of intellectual property and are invoked rarely. But doctors, researchers and members of Congress contend they stifle important discussions, including disclosures that problems exist. In some cases, they say, the software’s faults can have lethal results, misleading doctors and nurses who rely upon it for critical information in life-or-death situations.”

The article says that the  Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT (ONC) and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which are responsible for the EHR subsidy program, have ”done little about the clauses, though providers and researchers have been grumbling about them since the 2011 Institute of Medicine report warning that ‘[t]hese types of contractual restrictions limit transparency, which significantly contributes to the gaps in knowledge of health IT–related patient safety risks.”’

 


The ill-effects of flawed health-policy research

Stephen Soumerai and Ross Koppel complain in HealthAffairs about bad healthcare policy based on weak research.

“In a recent U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) …. article, one of us explains how five common biases and flawed study designs are often employed to support (or defeat) research on important health policies and interventions. Each case illustrates weak study designs that cannot control for bias, contrasting that with subsequent stronger studies that debunk the dramatic but unreliable findings.”

“Flawed studies have dictated treatment protocols, backed unneeded or wrong medications, stopped useful medications, overstated the health benefits and cost-savings of electronic health records, and grossly exaggerated the death-reductions from hospital safety programs. These misguided interventions resulted in trillions of dollars spent with few demonstrated health benefits.”

 


Work-arounds for dealing with EHR headaches

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A look at good and not-so-good work-arounds for clinicians in dealing with electronic health records, including cutting and pasting and the use of medical scribes — all while facing the deluge of data that can overwhelm everyone.


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