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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This is a 3 page paper that provides an overview of electronic medical records. Business incentives are explored, as well as privacy and ethical concerns. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: KW60_KFhth006.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
health care industry has been one of the most resistant industries, clinging to an outmoded paper-based records system that has increasingly come under fine for being inefficient, insecure, and excessively
costly. That said, the adoption of electronic medical records as a standard aims to change all that. Legislative incentives to adopt electronic medical records have recently been instituted, and the
debate surrounding the value of this information technology-driven approach is intensifying. This paragraph helps the student give a brief overview of electronic medical records. Electronic data management in the
health care industry is controversial for one reason: the question of who should and should not have access to records. One of the fundamental advantages of electronic data management in
health care facilities on the whole is that "individuals can contribute to diseases surveillance, public health, and research in ways not previously possible" thanks to the inherent transparency and accessibility
of records in an electronic environment (Roberts, 2009). Of course, the private nature of these records is such that access should be carefully controlled - access should only be obtainable
to health care providers, and the individual whose records are in question. Central to controlling this access is controlling how information flows between healthcare facilities; the bottom line is that
legislation will have to be concerned not simply with providing incentives for the adoption of electronic data management in healthcare, but also in instituting standards for the security of transmission
methods and infrastructure. One of the major benefits to electronic records in health care is the capacity for a switch from paper to electronic data management to increase revenue throughout
the industry by means of increasing efficiency and decreasing costs (of storage, handling, and so on) (Kumar & Bauer, 2011). The health care system in the United States is routinely
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