Psychiatric Bulletin (2005) 29: 393. doi: 10.1192/pb.29.10.393-a
© 2005 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Psychiatric Bulletin (2005) 29: 393
© 2005 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Electronic care record
J. D. Reed, Senior House Officer in Psychiatry of Learning Disability
Heath Lane Hospital, West Bromwich, West Midlands B712BG
Dr Holloway describes the moves to introduce an electronic care record
(ECR) (Psychiatric Bulletin, July 2005, 29, 241-243). He
raises concerns that important qualitative aspects may be lost
in the transition from existing medical records.
There is no reason to suppose that this should be the case. There is
nothing contained in traditional records that cannot be easily translated to
electronic form. The qualitative aspects may be contained in
free text notes or diagrams, and technology to include these is readily
available. In addition, the fact that the record will be permanently
accessible nationwide (and clearly legible) may encourage fuller and more
informative recording than at present.
Clearly, the mechanism of entry will change from pen and paper to keyboard
and mouse. This will pose no problem to the many increasingly IT-literate
trainees, and for some will make data entry faster and more accurate. For
everyone else, emergent technologies such as voice recognition may be
appropriate or the secretarial role could be expanded to include typing of
entries. Many documents (out-patient letters, minutes of meetings, etc) are
already typed and held on computer, so including these in the ECR should be
straightforward. There are clearly resource implications, but there will also
be savings, as many labour-intensive aspects of paper notes (fetching and
carrying, filing, locating records, etc) will no longer be needed.
Many trusts have already introduced some form of electronic patient record
with success. None of the problems posed is insuperable, and with appropriate
planning the ECR should surpass traditional medical records in every
aspect.
eLetters:
Read all eLetters
- Electronic "Care" Records
- David R Davies
- PB Online, 10 Oct 2005
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