Age and EMR

From Clinfowiki
Revision as of 02:17, 10 December 2008 by Hkolusu (Talk | contribs)

(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search

Does Elder Physicians offer more resistance To EMR. As more and more hospitals are trying to implement EMRs, does age play a role in physician's enthusiasm for the new technology? Review of literature shows that physicians nearing retirement offer more resistance.From an article in Dark Daily it was quoted that Philip Tally, M.D, that Physicians within five years of retirement may not get a return on investment.Dr.Tally a neurosurgeon was testifying at a hearing on "cost and Confidentiality;The Unforeseen challenges of Electronic Medical Records on small specialty practices" And there appars to be more physicians retiring.The American Medical Association's Physician Characteristics and Distribution in the U.S., 2008 edition shows how how physician demographics are weighted toward approaching retirement.There are 921,000 physicians in this country and ,of which 343,200(37.2%)are over age 54.Approximately 166,000 are aged 55 to 64and 177,200 are aged 65 and older.I also seen at our institution elder physicians are reluctant to embrace newer technology as it is very painful for them to adopt.They are used to paper and one physician asked me why should I spend so much time entering orders at the computer when I can enter on the paper in 5 minutes? Another factor is they are used to narrative style when they are dictating patient encounter and the coded data entry puts them off their thinking pattern.The other factor is their encounter with patient .Many got used to talking with the patient and then document either by hand or by dictating after the patient is gone.Many physicians are not computer savvy and are uncomfortable to use computer in front of the patient.So all the above factors make me wonder whether age plays a significant factor in adoption of EMRs.