Tag Archives: EHR

WWDC, Apple Developers and EHR Healthcare

First off some of you might be asking what is WWDC? WWDC is the official apple developer conference. It is held annually in Californa and brings the greatest minds in technology together. Apple developers are at the event, other developers as well, all focusing on developing on the apple platform like us.

A link to the keynote is from WWDC is here here.

WWDC was inspiring. Every time WWDC happens it helps our team at drchrono innovate. We watch the keynotes, the developer talks and brain storm about what we can use from the developer conference and apply it to heathcare.

Just a few key slides from the presentations, take a look at how apple is moving up in the laptop world.

If you are thinking about about changing the world through healthcare, check out the WWDC conference next year!

EHR Market is Growing Fast!

The EHR Market is Growing Fast!

Doing research on the EHR market we found studies that say the market will be doubling in the next few years.

Looking closely at the market from a few sources we found that only 6% of healthcare practitioners are running a full paperless practice.



Drchrono’s goal is to make sure that iPads are part of the future of EHRs!

Food Dyes Debate Draws On

This past week, an article was published in the New York Times entitled Artificial Dye Safe to Eat, Panel Says. In it, they argue that an expert panel has concluded that there is no proof that artificial food colorings cause hyperactivity in most children. This government panel further decided that there is no need for the foods to carry warning labels of potential to cause hyperactivity.

Curiously, 6 out of the 14 experts voted that a warning label was needed. This means that 43% of the panel found the evidence linking food coloring to ADHD alarming enough to suggest warning labels on all foods with artificial coloring.

I think it’s overwhelmingly premature to make such a bold statement as “Artificial Dye Safe to Eat” when only one expert could have tipped the balance to a 50-50 split decision.

Our First Commercial – Cloud EHR through EHR Web / EHR iPad / EHR iPhone

Checkout the first drchrono commercial when you have time!

This is part of the vision of what our company is about, creating a new type of healthcare that is on the go for physicians:

Workflow and ease of use

In order to get to ‘Meaningful Use’, we need to first get Provider’s to use an EHR to even hope to reach the level of obtaining meaningful use.  Financial barriers are another reason why adoption is difficult to attain.

However, I believe that Provider’s do want to do the “right thing”, which is EHR use.  I also believe that most Provider’s understand the utility of EHR’s and what progress it can bring to the healthcare field, but the problem lie’s mostly in human nature, that is ‘change’.  Change takes work, energy, and time.  We all get used to doing things a certain way without much thought.  This makes our lives easier.  It’s like creating our own thought process workflow routines/standards.  Why should we break what is not broken?  Is the incentive to change enough for Provider’s to modify what they have learned through exprience works for them?

The question then becomes how do we minimize the change required?  We need to create a system that is adaptable to the practice, not the other way around.  EHR’s need to be as transparent as possible.  Provider’s just want to interact with the information that will allow them to get their work accomplished as fast, easily, efficiently, and effectively as possible.  If this is accomplished, I believe that the financial barriers will be a secondary, albeit very important, concern.

As an example, my spouse can probably be classified as the ‘typical user’.  She uses computer’s only because she has to.  If it makes her life easier, she’ll use it, otherwise forget it.  She views technology as a means to an end.

I, on the other hand, have always liked computers.  I could be classified as a technophile.  I am in charge of updating our home computer’s.  Early on in my marriage, I would update my wife’s computer whenever it worked for me.  Furthermore, sometimes there were also interface changes which I thought were ‘cool’.  However, I sooned learned, after many demerits, that my spouse did not feel the same way.  She wanted things done when she was not affected.  She also wanted updates not to interfere with the interface that she was accustomed to.

This example demonstrates my point.  Provider’s, and the public at large, are mostly like  my  spouse.  They just want to use computer’s as tools to get their jobs done as quickly and efficiently as possible.  They don’t want the computer to become another ‘job’ to figure out just to get what they want done.  They just want it to be like an appliance that they use only when they need it.  And the sooner they  get their jobs done, the sooner they can get on with ‘living their lives’.