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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This is a 3 page paper that provides an overview of electronic medical record software. Benefits, drawbacks, and recommendations for future profitability are explored. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: KW60_KFmedrec.doc
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listed below. Citation styles constantly change, and these examples may not contain the most recent updates. A Comparison of EMR Technologies , 10/2010 --for more
information on using this paper properly! As the world enters the information age of the 21st century, it seems clear to many that physical storage of data is on
the way out. Libraries at corporations and universities across the world are increasingly turning to online databases instead of continuing to build their vast paper collections of periodicals. Banks and
businesses are increasingly going paper-free, conducting transactions online as much as possible because of the reduced expense of doing business. That said, there is one area in which the migration
towards digital storage of information has been problematic: electronic medical records. While electronic medical record (EMR) technology has been around in one form or another for more than a decade,
hospitals have been rather resistant in adopting electronic systems of record keeping for a variety of reasons. Consequently, EMR software manufacturers must continue to compete more intensely than ever before
to secure a share of the market. The market, for its part, is certainly quite problematic. Studies indicate that, on the whole, the hospital market is limping along, necessitating conditions
in which medical supply firms will have to up the ante and develop products that are more appealing to the institutional buyers; it is expected that software can be a
big part of this, but only if handled correctly ("New", 2009). In other words, widespread success in integrating EMR technology is dependent upon a high quality product that is a
true asset to hospitals rather than an expensive liability (Valdes, Kibbe, Tolleson, Kunik, & Petersen, 2004). A well-functioning piece of EMR software should appeal to the needs of clinicians by
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