
19. Electronic Health Records
Would you believe that the first attempts at creating Electronic Health Records (EHRs) were in the 1960s? Called clinical information systems, medical centers developed these early attempts individually. In the ’80s, the systems began to evolve, with industry-wide standards being formed based on the recommendations of the Institute of Medicine’s (IOM) intensive analysis of paper health records.
Now, doctors use EHRs in nearly every hospital, urgent care center, and clinic in the US. Plus, EHRs are in many centers around the world. EHRs have remarkably streamlined and improved patient care by allowing multiple providers access to a patient’s records without waiting for documents to be faxed or shipped from office to office. Your EHR also contains information from every doctor involved in your care, authorizing quick and easy access; this allows doctors to provide efficient, coordinated care and dramatically reduces the chance of errors. While we can still improve the system, there’s no doubt that Electronic Health Records have greatly improved the overall quality of care patients can receive.