Why I Want My Doctor to Use Electronic Medical Records

By Lou Paun, published Jan 16, 2006
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I want electronic medical records for my medical history! There are so many advantages to the system.

Paper records are almost always messy, making them time-consuming and difficult to use. Each folder contains dozens, sometimes hundreds, of pieces of paper, often of different sizes. Have you ever watched your doctor flip through page after page of your file and wondered if he would be able to find the lab report he needs to treat your current illness? Have you seen him shake his head in frustration as he looks for the record of the last time you had this particular problem, three or four years ago? A system of electronic medical records, with all the ease of sorting and accessing information, would make that problem a thing of the past. That can be important to me.

Paper records are also slow. Many people have to handle each piece of paper before it finds its final home in your file! How often have you heard “That lab report isn’t here yet,” when it’s in the office but just hasn’t made it into your file? How frustrating! Electronic medical records would be available much more quickly.

Electronic medical records would be less likely to be permanently damaged or lost. I’m not just talking about major catastrophes here, like my doctor’s office burning down or behind hit by a hurricane. Just having a cup of coffee spilled on a file can make many pages unreadable. Electronic medical records would be much safer. Yes, coffee spilled on a keyboard might make the record in front of me disappear, but I’d know that another copy exists. My records would be safely stored. Electrical failure might make the computer system fail, but my electronic medical records would be safely stored in archive of back-up files.

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