Robert Miller, PhD - Professor of Health Economics in Residence, Institute for Health & Aging and Department of Social & Behavioral Sciences, University of California, San Francisco on "Barriers to Electronic Health Record Use for Quality Improvement"

ABSTRACT

Large physician groups, solo/small groups, and community health centers face substantial challenges in implementing electronic health records (EHRs) and using them effectively for quality improvement. This talk provides an overview of the current EHR value proposition to physician practices. It describes the range of EHR capabilities used in physician practices, and the variation in EHR-related financial and time costs, and financial and quality benefits. It then examines technical, organizational, and policy factors that affect EHR costs and benefits and suggests policy interventions that can lower barriers to EHR use for quality improvement.

ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Dr. Miller is an expert on electronic health records (EHRs) in ambulatory care settings.  He focuses on EHR costs & benefits, quality improvement, organizational, and health policy issues. Currently, he is examining EHRs in solo/small groups and in community health centers, and is evaluating the Santa Barbara Care Data Exchange. Past work on managed care included literature analyses on HMO versus non-HMO performance comparisons.

 
Date and Time:
 Friday, April 8, 2005.  12:00 PM.
Approximate duration of 1 hour(s).
Location:
School of Medicine, Center for Clinical Sciences Research Building, Room 4105. Reception to follow in MSOB x348 at 1:30pm.  [Map]
URL:
Audience:
Faculty/Staff
Alumni/Friends
General Public
Students
Category:
Conferences/Symposia
Sponsor:
Stanford Center for Clinical Informatics - School of Medicine
Contact:
Download:
Last Modified:
April 4, 2005