An EHR is an electronic health record. An EMR is an electronic medical record. The two different kinds of records have different purposes, different scope, and fall under different legal requirements.
An EHR is an electronic health record. An EMR is an electronic medical record. The two different kinds of records have different purposes, different scope, and fall under different legal requirements.
With considerable protest, American health providers have replaced their hard-copy files with digital records. Doctor offices, health clinics, hospitals, and nursing facilities, along with the federal government, have invested billions of dollars in funding the software, hardware, and training necessary to power the changeover.
The government-mandated transition to electronic record systems has not occurred without some confusion in terminology. Numerous news reports refer to electronic health records, EHRs, and electronic medical records, EMRs, as if they were the same. They are not.
An electronic health record (EHR) is a digital snapshot of a patient’s entire medical history. It includes a patient’s current chart, but it is designed for medical practitioners in different healthcare facilities to share.
EHRs include everything doctors need to know about the health history of a patient, from family history to immunization history to allergies and procedures. EHRs contain radiological imaging and lab reports.
An electronic medical record (EMR) is a digital snapshot of a patient’s chart as it is maintained by a single healthcare provider. It contains a patient history, but it focuses on the activities of a particular primary care provider (physician or nurse practitioner), specialist, dentist, surgeon, or clinic.
EMRs make it easier for health care providers to track the progress of a patient over time. They facilitate timely reminders of appointments and periodic checkups. Many providers agree that they make better care possible.
It is not hard to grasp the distinction between electronic health records and electronic medical records if you consider the difference between the terms “health” and “medical.” A health record holds an expansive view of the patient’s medical history. A medical record is limited to a single provider’s view of the patient’s medical history.
Both electronic health records and electronic medical records have resulted in measurable improvements in medical care.
Radiologists are prime targets of cost-cutting efforts by government payers. The most common reason radiologists have to bill twice for their services is “under reading,” failure to appreciate details of imaging because of lack of complete information about the patient. Electronic medical records and electronic health records reduce the risk of under reading, resulting in improved accuracy of diagnosis and lower costs. One study in the American Journal of Roentgenology implied that complete information through electronic record systems could reduce the cost of radiologist review by 16 percent.
Experts agree that electronic recordkeeping could be improved, but adoption of the technology has resulted in measurable reductions in the cost of care and significant improvements in patient outcomes. Making the switch to electronic recordkeeping has proven to be a worthwhile investment in our nation’s healthy future.
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