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Inter-operable enough? Dr. Wachter defends Epic

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Many in the healthcare industry  hate Epic, the electronic health- records company. But “Digital Doctor” Robert Wachter, M.D., associate chair of the department of medicine at University of California, San Francisco, defends the company.

Dr. Wachter calls Epic, both its product and business practices, a fine operation and asserts that it  delivers what hospitals and health systems want, inter-operability and all.

Another defender, says Becker’s Hospital Review, is David Bates,  chief quality officer at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, in Boston. He told Dr. Wachter that Epic’s platform is the only EHR system that offers most of the capabilities that an organization wants in an EHR. “If you make a big matrix of all the various things that you want as an organization, Epic covers many more of the boxes than others,” Mr. Bates said.

Still, as Becker’s  notes, the hospital industry “by and large remains critical of Epic’s willingness to share data. Dr. Wachter argued in his book that the type of inter-operability the industry is gunning for isn’t the type of inter-operability many health leaders are focused on.”

 

 


Pressed by Feds, EHR vendors to waive sharing fees

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EPIC and other electronic health record vendors have agreed to waive record-sharing fees after the Feds warn them about “data blocking.”

The fees have long irritated hospital executives. Now it appears that all EHR vendors will agree to absorb providers’ usage costs in sharing patient records.

It’s another advance for the much desired  and long overdue full interoperability  of EHR systems

 


Greedy EHR vendors said to hold data ‘hostage’

 

Niam Yaraghi, of the Brookings Institution, denounces EHR vendors:

He notes that the “the next step forward {in pushing EHR’s} is to connect these electronic silos together so that physicians can share their patients’ records. The billions of dollars in federal spending will only have any tangible benefit if this is done successfully. EHR vendors have taken patient data hostage and are not willing to release it unless they receive a big ransom. They typically claim that technical problems limit the interoperability of their products. This prevents physicians from sharing their patient records with other doctors. This is like T-Mobile claiming that its users cannot make calls to AT&T customers. The claimed interoperability limitation does not end here. The vendors are proposing hefty charges to allow data sharing between their own customers.”

 


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