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Articles
Electronic Medical Records (EMR) in a Cloud V.S. EMR on a local server *Jan 2010 NEW*
"EMR Adoption Adoption prior to Health Super Highway? *Nov 2009*
"EMR Adoption before Infrastructure" - Why Electronic Medical Records
Selecting your EMR, Web Hosted v.s. Client Server, which is best.
Preparing The Staff For EMR
EMR in place & Paper is gone…
“I’m ready for EMR; but my staff is not”
EMR and What to expect from customer service?
December 2008 Secret to Success
More Articles
News
Bizmatics Inc’s EMR Software Announces CCHIT Certified® 2011 *June 2010 NEW*
Feb 08th, 2010 - PrognoCIS EMR Receives Certification From Surescripts for Complete E-Prescription Functionality Support
August 26th, 2009 - PrognoCIS is Proud to Announce Successful Deployment of Version 1.81 B40 Electronic Billing
July 24th, 2009 - Saline Heart Group announces integration of its Prognocis EMR
April 01th, 2009 - Saline Heart Group Announces Integration of Clinical Laboratory and the Prognocis EMR
February 9th, 2009 - Bizmatics Announces an EMR Trifecta for Medical Practice Automation
February 3rd, 2009 - Grambling State Takes Student Data Management Online
April 14th, 2008 - EMR Experts, Inc. publishes Second Edition of their EMR eBook
 
 

Preparing The Staff For EMR Major changes require employee “buy-in”

Perhaps one of the most challenging aspects of implementing an electronic medical records (EMR) system is managing its effect on the staff.

According to a study by executive search firm Korn/Ferry International, one of the most common mistakes that executives make when joining a company or making changes, is failing to properly read the existing corporate or office culture. An example would be a control-oriented manager coming into a company with a more collaborative culture, leading to tension and resistance.
In this column, I’ll explain how to adapt the existing office culture to facilitate your staff members’ acceptance of a switch from paper records to EMR.

Planning is Key
Taking time to properly plan a project and making minor tweaks along the way can help to avoid having to pull the plug completely on an EMR system, often with significant financial consequences for a practice. This is also important in the planning of the computer network that will be used in the office, regardless of which software you decide to use.
A useful tool to employ in making any significant transition is the concept of change management, which is essentially making changes in a planned and systematic fashion. The following ten principals of change management can be adapted to the implementation of an EMR system.

Address the human side
Jobs will change and there will be anxiety. If employees don’t “buy in” to a new system it will probably fail. For example, you can’t “sell” a new computer system on the premise that it will enable the practice to cut jobs.

Start at the top.
It’s important for key staff, including physicians and administration to be on board. A physician “champion” is needed—one of the doctors with strong commitment to see the project through to the end, preferably someone facile with technology but realistic and not overly optimistic.

Involve every layer.
Everyone needs to feel that his or her contribution is important. Form a committee of employees to evaluate different systems and let them make proposals to the physicians. These should be people who will be using the system: administration, business office, and medical assistants.

Make the formal case.
People will always question the need for change. Have a written vision statement. You need to be able to explain to the organization the what, how and why this process is taking place. Prove that an EMR system is better than the existing paper process or else it won’t be used.

Create ownership.
Appoint leaders who will have ownership of the project. They have more credibility with their subordinates than the doctor. Train these core people and then use them to train the rest of the practice. Communicate the message. Keep channels open. Encourage constant feedback. Lay out a plan and sequence of action. Keep staff informed and involved in the process.

Assess the cultural landscape.
Identify core values, beliefs, perceptions, and sources of resistance. People get set in their ways: the employee who doesn’t know how to use a mouse or the doctor who can’t check email.

Address the culture explicitly.
Take baby steps if necessary— people should gradually learn to use a computer, a mouse, e-mail, and more sophisticated programs like practice management software, then finally EMR. Keep less enthusiastic physicians involved, otherwise they’ll be resistant.

Prepare for the unexpected. There will be problems. Hurricanes Charley, Frances and Jeanne resulted in a changing target for our “go live” date of conversion to the new system, with significant ripple effects, which were manageable because of proper planning and flexibility by our EMR committee.

Speak to the individual.
Be clear in what is expected of each person. Be confident, but not unrealistic—allay employees’ fears, particularly when there are problems.

Many “failures” of EMR systems have as much to do with poor planning and implementation as with deficiencies in the software itself. This is especially true when it comes to the changes that occur on the human side. Planning how a new EMR system will integrate within a specific practice before actually installing the software will be time well spent and, ultimately, will benefit the bottom line.

For more information on how to purchase the right EMR please read our EMR eBook

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