【NPR新闻】电子病历,看上去很美(3/4)
简介:Patient
William Wishart, age 4 months, looks on as Dr. Melanie Walker uses a portable
computer to enter information from his exam into an electronic medical records
system, in North Raleigh, N.C., in November.
参与方式:全文听写
Hints:
Kellerman
seven-data elements
$2.50
Dr.
Farzad Mostashari
National
Coordinator for Health Information Technology
不同说话者换行即可~
http://t1.g.hjfile.cn/listen/201301/201301241250563409513.mp3Some of Kellerman's criticism is valid but some of it's not, says the doctor charged with leading American medicine's digital transformation.
People talk about the ATM, and that's seven-data elements, and they charge you $2.50 for shipping those seven data, you know, data fields over. We're talking thousands of data fields around things that are life and death.
Dr. Farzad Mostashari is the White House's National Coordinator for Health Information Technology. His office meets constantly with software vendors. They're trying to hammer out the basic industry standards necessary to make sharing health information as easy as bank records or other important information.
But we have actually these meetings on average every three-and-a-half hours for the past three years.
Mostashari says the number of doctors and hospitals using electronic records has doubled in the last two years. He admits there are growing pains but says the government's strategy is helping.
It is a work in progress. And, you know, it's going to be hard work. But it is way, I think, too soon to be saying, oh, this is such a disappointment.
Mostashari says it'll be another six years before the government's IT strategy starts showing significant savings.
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