Document Imaging for Healthcare
Should medical practices turn to proven technologies to increase office efficiency?
Why EMR systems are problematic for most medical practices.
Document imaging in the medical practice.
Is technology your servant or master: comparing EMR and document imaging?
Will an EMR system protect you in a malpractice lawsuit 10, 15 or 20 years from now?
Listen to what a doctor has to say: audio whitepapers.
Medical practice case study.
Try our online demo.
With our
document imaging system you may never want or need an EMR system
Our document imaging software takes a paper medical record and creates
a universal electronic patient medical record that is easily managed.
By scanning patient records into a searchable PDF file that is stored
electronically on a network server, physicians and support staff
can retrieve a patient's records from any networked computer. Our
software also allows patient records to be retrieved easily over
the Internet, from a hospital, a satellite office, or from home.
We are an alternative to an EMR system!
Healthcare is bogged down in paper. Trapped in the antiquated and
inefficient paper- based system, healthcare providers are looking
for way to take advantage of new technologies that reduce costs,
increase productivity and improve patient care.
They have turned to technology for help. However, software developers
are stuck in their own paradigm. They are focused on data and
data management. Nowhere is this truer than with EMR systems.
There is a strong tendency for IT to implement magnificent EMR
systems that have plenty of bells and whistles, but do not efficiently
handle the primary needs physicians set out to address. EMR systems
provide feature-rich solutions that produce more pitfalls than
productive results.
EMR developers have made a critical error by failing to recognize
that medicine is more of an art than a science. Forcing a physician
to a check box and drop-down menu system is similar to instructing
an artist to paint within the lines. For an EMR system to be useful,
it must integrate seamlessly into the physician's decision process
and established method of practice.
We concluded that the problem was not data; it was paper.
Considering that for years the healthcare community has gleaned
all the data needed from a paper document, the inefficiencies
that plague the industry are clearly those associated with mass
paper management.
The answer is a document imaging software that creates a system
that electronically simulates the current paper schematic. The
document imaging process mirrors the paper- based system, duplicating
the workflow pattern for any given task. The only difference is
the unparalleled convenience of retrieving and viewing medical
records in an electronic format. These records are exact replicas
of their paper counterparts. Essentially, a physician can maintain
his or her current pattern of practice while realizing all the
benefits promised by electronic medical records.
And, unlike complicated EMR systems, our document imaging system
is designed to take the complicated and make it simple. In fact,
our document imaging system is so simple to use that office staff
and physicians can master it in less than 15 minutes.