Posted by: AtlasMD

October 18, 2013

A Third Of Med Students Aren’t Using EMR… Wait, Is That A Bad Thing?

A study published last year by the Alliance for Clinical Education found that just 64 percent of med school programs allowed future docs any use of electronic records. Oh, and of those that do, only two-thirds allowed students to actually write notes within the EHR.

Okay, so med schools are failing to fully prepare students for a future of potential bureaucratized headaches. But this is an interesting predicament, given the EMRs themselves are failing, too (just ask the doctors, the studies, etc.; no one is touting the current state of EMR as exemplary). However, there’s a relevant bit of knowledge here. Call it common, call it what you will, but we believe the best a person can be is well-informed, second to that is uninformed, because the worst spot to be in is misinformed. In this latter case, you not only are contaminated with bad information or insights, but you then have to unlearn what you know in order to move forward.

So, who thinks this finding is bad news? Not us. We’re more concerned with the two-thirds of students who were exposed to today’s kickback-savoring EMR. The same shoddy EMR we’re rejecting by launching our own practice management and EMR software specifically for direct care.

READ MORE ABOUT EMR USAGE IN MED SCHOOL CURRICULUM

MORE GREAT NEWS: Conservative Student Group Fights For Free Market In Medicine

StarTribune posted a timely article (Via Huffington Post) from Durham, North Carolina. They’re reporting on a “new conservatism” that’s taking root on some college campuses, fed in part by opposition to Obamacare. The groups are modeled after The Federalist Society for Law and Public Policy, which according to the post “has molded several generations of legal thinkers at the nation’s law schools.” We’re excited to hear that this new wave of conservative thinkers wants to take root in graduate schools of business, foreign policy, and most relevant to our fight, schools of medicine like Duke University.

Read more