Four fixes needed for PCEHR
The success of the PCEHR is threatened by the lack of GP input into the program and lack of a Medicare rebate to recognise the extra workload it will create for GPs, the RACGP says.
In a statement released this week, the College says the lack of clinical input into the design and implementation of an electronic record system was one of the key reasons for the demise of the UK’s e-health program.
It says the Department of Health and Ageing, NEHTA and the RACGP need to reach agreement on critical issues “such as data quality and ownership within the PCEHR, the PCEHR’s links with clinical software, and possible impact on clinical and practice workflows which will be a disincentive to widespread adoption. “
RACGP president Professor Claire Jackson says the College is also concerned about the lack of any incentives for general practice for additional tasks such as creating PCEHR documents and obtaining informed consent.
The College has also highlighted two other critical areas of the PCEHR that need attention, citing the need to get patient s from high risk groups to “opt in” and the clinical and medicolegal risks of allowing patients to alter their clinical record.
A program is needed to encourage PCEHR uptake by the groups that will most likely to benefit, namely patients with chronic and complex conditions, older Australians, Aboriginal people and mothers with new-born children, it says.