2012年6月6日星期三

cesc fabregas camiseta

cesc fabregas camiseta,
? ? ?Last year you may recall me discussing the current effort by the government to create electronic medical records by physicians, hospitals, and other health care providers (see?"My Dinner with the Doctor"). In a nutshell, the government is blackmailing doctors into automating all of their medical records. As a follow-up, I recently discussed this effort with my doctor friend to see how he was progressing, and a senior hospital administrator I also happen to know. Both claimed the effort was a nightmare and their time was being monopolized converting old records into an electronic format.
? ? ?In theory, such an effort means a patient who travels away from home will be able to easily access his medical records which can greatly facility him/her receiving the proper treatment in the event of an emergency. Sounds good, right? Not so fast. I was horrified to discover cesc fabregas camiseta the government never issued any standards by which data should be captured, stored, and shared in a secure manner. The only requirement was that the medical records were converted to electronic format, regardless of what that might be. As I was to learn, there are dozens, if not hundreds, of vendors selling computer software packages designed to manage patient records. Not surprising, each vendor took their own unique approach to designing their camisetas fabregas software which means there is an alarming number of incompatibilities between the different products. How one company stores patient data in a computer file is camisetas futbol replicas incompatible with another vendor. This means doctors and hospitals cannot share data as easily as was hoped. In other words, the government took a noble idea and botched it by failing to define any standards. Just because your primary physician has your medical records recorded one way, doesn't mean another doctor can read it (unless, of course, the doctor happens to have the same medical records software). Despite the government's initiative, doctors will still be dependent on faxes as opposed to a modern and secured data exchange. As an aside, my doctor friend received 18K faxes last year representing 50K pieces of paper (and that is just one doctor). The government's new program does nothing to curtail this problem.

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