Copyright 2008
DoctorsPartner, LLC.
( all rights reserved )
Handling
Incoming Faxes in your EMR
More often than not, greater than 50% of the paper floating
around in your medical office came in via the fax machine.That innocuous machine sitting is the corner is a
notorious killer of trees!You have lab results, consult notes, referral letters,
refill request and a plethora of other medical documents
pouring into your office over thin copper wires!
Let’s take an incoming lab for example, in a typical
paper office with no EMR.The fax machine spits out the coversheet and lab
result.Your nurse (or designated person), collates the faxes,
hunts down and pulls the patient chart, attaches the fax to
the front of the chart, drops it off on your desk (possibly
with a post it note on top of the fax with any notes).You read the fax and assuming, sign off on the result,
put another post it note (or another type of note) on the
chart and hand it back to your nurse/MA/assistant to call the
patient and let them know all is well.Beautifully choreographed like ballet, except not quite
as graceful!Now if the lab results are not normal, you just added
another layer of complexity to this dance.
Now let’s take the example of an office with an EMR.Most good EMR’s today have a document management
module built in.Most EMR’s today also have some capability for fax
management, whether it is built in or using a third party
tool.Either way, the faxes are now coming in as digital
images to your fax server, no longer denuding the rainforests
in Brazil.You do not have to automatically print out every fax.You could now load the incoming fax directly to the
patient’s electronic chart (no more hunting for the chart).Via a built in notification function, the doctor is
notified of the lab received and can now view and sign off on
it electronically.If the patient needs to be called, the doctor fires off
an internal messaging or internal email notification to the
nurse to do the same.
There are many advantages to this change in your workflow:
Save
trees.
Save
money on paper.
Speed
– from fax receipt to notification, the work process is
measured in seconds, not minutes.The subsequent follow up actions are also greatly
streamlined.
Improved
patient safety – no more misplaced faxes.
Improved
tracking functions – audit trails as to who did what,
when etc.
Surprisingly, many offices, even those with EMRs already,
are not taking advantage of this ability.It is in your best interest (especially in the best
interests of your pocket book) to make sure that you do
consider this method as a ‘must do’ step.If you already don’t have an EMR, then this is a
perfect example of the workflow benefit you could be getting
once you do make that jump!
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Electronic Medical Record System in the small practice
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report! Our customers can also fill out the customer survey
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