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Hospital System Launches One of the Nation's
Largest Electronic Medical Record Implementations
MINNEAPOLIS, 9/1/2004 -- Allina Hospitals
& Clinics is launching one of the nation's largest electronic
medical record implementations this week at Buffalo Hospital. As
part of an ongoing mission to improve the quality and safety of
patient care, Buffalo Hospital is the first Allina hospital to transition
away from paper processes and begin using an electronic medical
record system that will ultimately be shared by all of Allina's
seventy-six sites, including 11 hospitals and sixty-five clinics.
Four Allina Medical Clinic sites in Annandale, Buffalo, Cokato and
Litchfield transitioned earlier this month.
"Transitioning to an electronic medical record system is a
top priority for Allina because it provides our doctors and employees
with the necessary tools to enhance the quality and safety of the
medical care we deliver to patients," says Dick Pettingill,
President and CEO of Allina Hospitals & Clinics.
The number of sites and the sharing of patient records among those
sites make this implementation one of the largest, most integrated
electronic medical record systems in the country. When the implementation
is completed in the next four years, all of Allina's clinics and
hospitals will document a patient's care in one shared electronic
medical record, which provides a more complete picture of a patient's
medical history at Allina. This translates into less hassle for
patients in transferring their medical information from one Allina
caregiver to another and/or repeating the same information multiple
times. Doctors and caregivers will be able to reference all of a
patient's vital statistics, test results, medications, allergies
and prior health conditions regardless of where the information
was collected within the Allina system.
"Understanding the full scope of a patient's current and past
care helps doctors make the best recommendation for a condition
or illness," says Andrew Burgdorf, a family physician at Allina
Medical Clinic – Buffalo and at Buffalo Hospital. "Often
times, patients don't remember or can't provide details of the care
they have received. With one patient record, Allina caregivers are
able to view information about a patient's treatment at Allina,
confer with each other on patient care, and review a history of
test and lab results."
Allina's electronic medical record system will help provide patients
with greater peace of mind knowing their caregivers have the information
they need:
- Timely access to medical information. A patient's complete
medical history can be viewed with a few clicks of the computer
mouse by doctors and caregivers with security privileges, providing
immediate, easy access to patient information.
- One source of patient information. If a patient has been
treated at the hospital and is at the clinic for a follow-up visit,
documentation from their hospital stay is easily available to
doctors and caregivers because the information is in a single,
shared electronic medical record.
- Immediate safety checks. As an added safety feature,
the system automatically cross-checks a patient's allergies and
current medications with any new prescriptions being considered
by the doctor or caregiver. The physician will be alerted immediately
if there is a potential drug or allergy interaction and is able
to order a different medication without delay.
- Providing information once. Because patients have one
medical record that is shared among their caregivers, they only
need to provide their contact and insurance information, as well
as details of their medical history once – including allergies,
medications and prior health conditions. After that, patients
merely verify the information is up-to-date.
- Quicker access to test results. Now, a caregiver is notified
by email when test results have been added to a patient's electronic
medical record. There is no waiting for test results to travel
from the lab to the caregiver's office or from one caregiver to
another. Having one record that is shared among caregivers and
locations makes it easier to review a history of test results.
Allina has a long history of investing in and implementing new
technology to improve patient care. Research on implementing an
electronic medical record began in the mid-1990s and programming
and development began in 2003. The end-result is a record that more
than satisfies a major Department of Health and Human Services initiative
announced by President Bush in July 2004, requiring medical providers
to begin documenting patient care in an electronic format.
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