NY Daily News    by Charles Krauthammer
A bout a decade ago, a doctor friend was lamenting the increasingly 
frustrating conditions of clinical practice. “How did you know to get 
out of medicine in 1978?” he asked with a smile.
 “I didn’t,” I replied. “I had no idea what was coming. I just felt I’d chosen the wrong vocation.”
 I was reminded of this exchange upon receiving my med-school class’s 
40th-reunion report and reading some of the entries. In general, my 
classmates felt fulfilled by family, friends and the considerable 
achievements of their professional lives. But there was an undercurrent 
of deep disappointment, almost demoralization, with what medical 
practice had become.
 The complaint was not financial but vocational — an incessant 
interference with their work, a deep erosion of their autonomy and 
authority, a transformation from physician to “provider.”
 As one of them wrote, “My colleagues who have already left practice all
 say they still love patient care, being a doctor. They just couldn’t 
stand everything else.” By which he meant “a never-ending attack on the 
profession from government, insurance companies, and lawyers . . . 
progressively intrusive and usually unproductive rules and regulations,”
 topped by an electronic health records (EHR) mandate that produces 
nothing more than “billing and legal documents” — and degraded medicine. [...]
 And for what? The newly elected President Obama told the nation in 2009
 that “it just won’t save billions of dollars” — $77 billion a year, 
promised the administration — “and thousands of jobs, it will save 
lives.” He then threw a cool $27 billion at going paperless by 2015.
 It’s 2015 and what have we achieved? The $27 billion is gone, of 
course. The $77 billion in savings became a joke. Indeed, reported the 
Health and Human Services inspector general in 2014, “EHR technology can
 make it easier to commit fraud,” as in Medicare fraud, the 
copy-and-paste function allowing the instant filling of vast data 
fields, facilitating billing inflation.[...]
 Then there is the toll on doctors’ time and patient care. One study in 
the American Journal of Emergency Medicine found that emergency-room 
doctors spend 43% of their time entering electronic records information,
 28% with patients. Another study found that family-practice physicians 
spend on average 48 minutes a day just entering clinical data.
 Forget the numbers. Think just of your own doctor’s visits, of how much
 less listening, examining, even eye contact goes on, given the need for
 scrolling, clicking and box checking.[...]
 
 
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