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发表于 2005-10-17 11:24:21
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EHR不等于EMR(本人数天的成果)
<!--quote-张琨+2005-10-16 18:12--><div class='quotetop'>引用 张琨 @ 2005-10-16 18:12)</div><div class='quotemain'><!--quote1--><p>我和Garets就此问题又进行了讨论,他的意见和我一致:</p><p> </p><p>What I mean by lack of interaction of an EMR versus an EHR is that what's available to the patient in an EMR<br />environment is information about their encounter with that healthcare organization. Most EMRs that are implemented in American hospitals, health systems, and physician offices don't have patient access yet. But even the ones<br />that do only allow patients to access some information from their medical record, but don't allow them to enter data into the system. That's what I mean by "interactive." </p><p> </p><p>The nascent EHRs that are being designed and implemented now not only allow patient access to encounter information, albeit summary data rather than the whole record, but also allow the patient to add information to the record that may not be there like vaccination records, allergy information, etc.</p><p> </p><p>他的意见也是对患者而言的interactive,EMR没有,而EHR有,但我觉得Jing的解释也可以从另外一个侧面诠释interactive。<br /></p><p><!--quote2--></div><!--quote3--><br /></p>That makes sense too... and great thanks to <span>张琨</span> for following it up with Gerets. :-)<br /> ersonally, I did not feel Garets' further elaboration is conflictive to what I thought initially - the information fields within EHR that allow for patient edit-access are generally personal information, i.e., gender, address, date-of-birth, allergy, past history (maybe). When it comes to things like the encounter diagnoses and prescription information, I would be very surprised if the patient has an access to modify.<br /><p>Another caveat I wish to add, is that allowing direct patient interaction with a provider organization’s EMR is not yet in its full bloom, however, is definitely something many are looking into. While read-access allows a patient to review his/her personal care record, well controlled write-access is also being explored to motivate and promote a patient's participation in his/her own care management, and to improve the efficiency of history collection. Of course, the write-access is generally limited to patient personal information and correspondence, for a good reason.</p> |
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