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Posts Tagged ‘EPM’

In order to implement important changes at your practice, you must gain buy-in from the staff. The executive search firm Korn/Ferry International cites a lack of employee buy-in as one of the most common management mistakes a new executive makes when trying to implement any new strategies or changes. If this executive fails to take the existing culture into consideration, the initiatives often fail.changes sign.jpg

For example, consider the controlling manager who arrives at a business only to discover that the employees work collaboratively. This combination can lead to significant struggles. Alternately, let’s consider the savvy executive who approaches the situation with an ability to acclimate, and who discovers ways to work in harmony with the existing culture and style at the firm. The latter approach can significantly assist your efforts to gain cooperation from staff when implementing the transition from paper records to electronic medical records (EMR).

Proper planning and the ability to adjust during the process are two tools that can help you avoid the need to pull the plug on your EMR project, with a potentially disastrous economic effect on your practice. The ‘Change Management’ process, which touts navigating change in a careful and systematic way, is a great tool to employ during this time.

Change Management: 10 Key Factors

  1. Be clear and concise in speaking to each individual. Everyone should understand what is happening and what is expected from each. As long as having confidence doesn’t mean being unrealistic, it can be good for morale when problems arise. Be prepared to calm the fears of some staff.
  2. The need for change will not go unquestioned. Present your case in a formal, referenced way which proves the benefits of changing over to a paperless system. Users need an incentive to change their habits, and will actually resist using the new tool otherwise.
  3. Maintain good communications by keeping a dialogue channel open, encouraging participation at each step. The plan should also include a time line of actions for completion. Make sure to give the staff all the required information in the implementation process.
  4. Address the aspects of the culture with explicit intent and detail. People can be expected to learn new skills on a gradual basis, taking baby steps toward learning more about more basic technology (using a computer, using a mouse. etc.), then advancing to more complex systems such as EMR.
  5. Problems are a given; expect the unexpected. These may push back the system go-live date, and the effects will reverberate throughout the organization. Use the correct degree of flexibility to manage these effects.
  6. When gaining acceptance, start at the top. The top tier of staff members, especially physicians and administrators, should be on board with the program, including any champions for the cause. If you have strong allies with the right technological skill and without a naive level of optimism, that is especially helpful.Resistant doctors in particular can be detrimental to the project, so stay on top of the nay-sayers.
  7. Always acknowledge the human aspects. Without acceptance from the staff, a change to a new system could ultimately fail. The prospect of change often adds anxiety to the mix of human emotions, and this should be acknowledged during the process.
  8. People should get involved at every level, so that everyone feels they contributed to the outcome. A committee of staff members, formed to create a proposal for delivery to the physicians, is another excellent tool. This committee should be representative of those who will ultimately use the EMR: administrators, business staff, and medical assistants.
  9. Always make identifications and assessments of core values and beliefs in a cultural assessment, including possible sources of conflict or resistance. People often become set in their ways, resisting change as a general rule.
  10. The leaders of the group should take ownership over project elements. As these staff members have better credibility with their subordinates compared to the physicians, these people are crucial and should be the first trained in the new system (’super-users’), then passing the info on through training.

Ultimately, every employee needs to buy-in to the change, and for this to occur successfully, a helpful framework is known as the ADKAR model (Prosci):

  • A = Awareness of why the change is needed
  • D = Desire to support and participate in the change
  • K = Knowledge of how to change
  • A = Ability to implement new skills and behaviors
  • R = Reinforcement to sustain the change

Have you already implemented EMR in your practice? Did you have issues related to the Change Management? Post a comment below and let us know.

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Medical practices that are planning to get an electronic medical records (EMR) system in the near future will also need to consider whether they will be keeping their existing practice management software (EPM). Many factors come into play and we will discuss the pros and cons another time. For the purposes of our discussion, let’s assume you decided to upgrade to a new EPM that comes integrated with the new EMR system.

What do you do with all of the existing patient insurance and demographic data?

Keep it or throw it all away?

First, a little background. It is the year 1998 and businesses around the world are beginning to panic about the impending specter of the Y2K (year 2000) crisis. You remember – all computers will stop working because nobody thought to put the year in four digits instead of ‘19’ followed by two digits. (more…)

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Ask any doctor,  what is the first thing you should buy for an EMR implementation and the response will be, “The EMR Software, of course.”

Wrong! Ask any non-medical person involved with EMR implementation and his or her opinion would be that the EMR software is the last (or one of the last things) to choose.

But let’s assume that you already know that there are some basics that must be set up first, such as your building’s infrastructure, your network design, determining staff skill sets, etc. (If not, then check out this blog for previous posts on these topics before proceeding).

In this article, I¹ll discuss how to decide on both an EMR software vendor and the actual EMR software. (more…)

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Even if you haven’t yet made the leap to full electronic medical records (EMR) implementation, chances are you’re already using a computerized system for scheduling, billing, or other administrative functions. And unless you only have one computer in the office, it’s likely that the computers are connected by some sort of network.

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