Monday, January 23, 2017

Saturday, October 17, 2015

EHR Cartoons – Fun Friday

Like to share with you a funny EHR related cartoon by John Lynn. I think you’ll enjoy :)



Monday, April 7, 2014

Using SDLC Methodology to Implement HIT

The implementation of HIT significantly alters technical, social, organizational, economic, cultural, and
political aspects of the work environment. Since healthcare is a very complex, highly dynamic and interactive
environment, an iterative software development/ implementation process like System Development Life Cycle (SDLC) is one of the best suited approaches for successful implementation of HIT. This article from Leidos Health puts that as simple as it can be, enjoy!

Thursday, February 27, 2014

Epic's Faulkner: Large customers not buying into health IT cloud

Over the last few months, it has been clear that health IT cloud vendors are becoming more viable choices for enough healthcare providers that the market will grow into a$50 billion global market by 2018. Vendors of all stripes are charging hard into the marketplace. Read more..

Monday, January 6, 2014

Hospital takes EHR heavyweight to court


A rural Montana hospital has filed suit against  NextGen Healthcare, alleging the company violated its contract by both failing to install an EHR system by the set deadline and not providing a system that meets 2014 federal meaningful use criteria. http://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/hospital-takes-ehr-company-court?topic=,08,17

Friday, December 27, 2013

5 Things to Know About HL7 FHIR

A new term spreading (almost like fire) through the healthcare interoperability world is HL7 FHIR, pronounced as “fire.” Here are the Top 5 things I think you should know about this upcoming standard many hope will help solve many current issues in interoperability. Learn more

Thursday, December 19, 2013

Why Do Healthcare IT Projects Fail?

It is not uncommon to read commentaries from healthcare thought leaders about healthcare IT projects that fail, either failing to meet objectives, failing to come in on time/on budget, or failing entirely. Within the provider community there seems to be an abundance of anecdotal stories of EHR and other technology failures. Some of these stories are perpetuated by the EHR software vendors themselves. Right after a practice has had a very promising demo from software vendor A, software vendor B comes in and says, righteously, “Oh, we just deinstalled system A in a practice. It was a disaster but now they are very happy.” Read more at: http://www.physicianspractice.com/blog/why-do-healthcare-it-projects-fail#sthash.goMCNFhi.dpuf