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The Role of Information Technology For A Private Medical Practice

The Role of Information Technology For A Private Medical Practice. Noel Chua Rosalinda Raymundo. BACKGROUND . Ellwood Medical Group Zelienople and Ellwood City 5 Doctors, 1 Nurse Practitioner 5 Offices Ellwood City Hospital 8000 patients. MAJOR PLAYERS . Doctors and Nurse Practitioner

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The Role of Information Technology For A Private Medical Practice

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  1. The Role of Information Technology For A Private Medical Practice Noel Chua Rosalinda Raymundo

  2. BACKGROUND • Ellwood Medical Group • Zelienople and Ellwood City • 5 Doctors, 1 Nurse Practitioner • 5 Offices • Ellwood City Hospital • 8000 patients

  3. MAJOR PLAYERS • Doctors and Nurse Practitioner • Office staff (secretaries, nurses, etc) • Insurers • Pharmacies

  4. OBJECTIVE • To analyze the problems encountered primarily by doctors in EMG and propose a system that will provide solutions to these problems especially through information technology

  5. PROBLEMS IDENTIFIED • Patient record inaccessibility • Poor scheduling process and no monitoring of incoming lab results and outstanding messages • No integration of diagnosis and billing codes

  6. PROBLEMS CONTINUED • No alerts for missed health maintenance protocols • No alerts for lack of progress towards an expected goal • No process for tracking down referrals and consultation

  7. PROBLEMS CONTINUED • Lack of customized flowsheets for various medical problems • No process of tracking prescriptions filled by the pharmacies • No process of tracking adverse drug reactions according to different categories such as by patient, drug, or pharmacy

  8. PROBLEMS CONTINUED • No process available to access single or groups of medical records by specific clinical attributes • No process for alerting physician on non-covered medicines or HMO authorization requirements

  9. ANALYSIS OF THE REQUIREMENTS OF THE PROBLEMS • To improve accessibility requires a system that will allow capture and storage of patient data easily retrievable at the point of care • The system should be capable of different administrative functions

  10. ANALYSIS CONTINUED • The system should support physicians in the proper use of billing codes, integrating these codes with diagnosis codes and procedural codes • The system should have an alert system that will trigger a response from the physician when treatment objectives are not satisfied

  11. ANALYSIS CONTINUED • The system should enable physicians to do ad hoc queries such as tracking referrals and consultations • The system should allow physicians to view nationally accepted practice guidelines on demand and enable physicians to provide relevant handouts

  12. ANALYSIS CONTINUED • The system must be able to alert physician whether a prescription is filled or not filled • The system should be able to monitor and alert physician about adverse drug reactions and classify them according to causation • The system must allow physicians or authorized users access to single or groups of medical records by specific attributes

  13. ANALYSIS CONTINUED • The system should alert physician about non-covered medication and likely requires integration with the systems of the pharmacy or the insurers

  14. MAJOR VENDOR IDENTIFIED • MCKESSON HBOC www.hboc.com • Strategic mix of applications and technologies, support and services designed to support the entire health delivery process • Allows physicians and other clinicians to document patient information at the point of care

  15. HBOC CONTINUED • Allows management of cash flow, monitor risk, maintain and share patient demographics and medical records • Allows scheduling of services and resources • Allows access, control, analysis and integration and sharing of financial and patient information throughout the organization

  16. HBOC CONTINUED • Offers managed care software solutions for providers beginning to assume risk for patient populations as well as managed care organizations • Offers decision support tools for the provider and payor markets by giving them access to diverse sources of information, powerful analytical functions, and extensive reporting and presentation tools

  17. HBOC CONTINUED • Offers extensive clinical management tools to optimize quality, appropriateness and cost-effectiveness of patient care • Offers comprehensive financial management tools that facilitate detailed cost accounting and budgeting analysis, resource utilization analysis, member management, risk assessment

  18. GAPS IN EXISTING SOLUTIONS • HBOC does not allow customization of chart formats and specialty specific formats • Has limited support for customizing flowsheets • Does not track prescriptions filled • Does not track causes of adverse drug reactions

  19. GAPS CONTINUED • Does not have the ability to handle clinical problem solving • Does not support education for drug/food interactions

  20. CONCLUSION • EMG needs a system that will: • allow an integrated delivery of health service • streamline all work processes • integrate all office functions, • monitor patient outcomes and alert physicians

  21. CONCLUSION CONTINUED • Boost efficiency and productivity • This requires a considerable investment of its resources in order to adapt and stay competitive in a technology driven society

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