Discussion – Week 5 COLLAPSE Electronic Health Records Electronic health records (EHRs) are at the center stage of the effort to improve health care quality and control costs. In addition to allowing medical practitioners to access and record clinical doc
- EHRs improve accuracy by reducing the possibility of mistakes that can occur when handwritten notes are lost or paperwork is misplaced. EHRs also offer an electronic auditing trail, which can be used for tracking changes made to patient records.
- Enhanced care coordination: EHRs allow multiple providers to access a patient’s medical history, lab results, and other relevant information. Improved care coordination: EHRs allow multiple providers to access a patient’s medical history, lab results and other relevant information.
- EHRs are more efficient. They streamline tasks like scheduling appointments, ordering lab tests and prescribing medication. It reduces the administrative workload and allows more time to be spent on patient care.
- EHRs improve patient outcomes. They help healthcare providers to make better decisions regarding patient care. This results in improved health outcomes.
- EHRs can reduce costs by reducing the cost of printing, storing, and printing paper records. EHRs also help reduce the costs of medical mistakes, like duplicate tests or wrong medications.