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Epic medical system8/6/2023 ![]() ![]() We built a product to run our own clinic and are almost ready for wide release. If you want to learn more about how we're approaching the problem my email is in my profile. Attacking the incumbents directly will end in certain doom. You need to understand how the industry operates to be able to find a foothold. The limiting factor is not software development talent. If it were easier I think you would have greater competition which would lead to better products.Ĭan we do better? Absolutely. This is at odds with the ideal software project, where everything is defined up front and can be turned into an efficient repeatable process. Nothing is standard, everything is specialized. There is no way to turn a hospital visit into an assembly line. Even physicians in the same discipline vary greatly in the way that they practice their craft. ![]() For reference, the average staff ratio is 2.7 billing professionals for each physician across the industry. If you don't believe me, check how many staff members are dedicated to billing at your hospital. Every other reason given for their existence is secondary to that need. Electronic medical records primarily exist for billing an insurance company or the government. They mostly care about billing, compliance, data integrity, security, and managing costs. The people making purchasing decisions do not care about the usability of the product, as they are not going to be the ones using it. Everything is clunky, confusing, and old but the job gets done and that is good enough. It's the same story that most big banks find themselves in. Most of these systems carry a lot of baggage from their development history and are too risky or brittle to modify without good reason. Hospitals were some of the earliest adopters of computers and the systems that were developed have been in place for decades. So the market is dominated by companies that were earliest to market (Meditech, Epic, Cerner, Allscripts) or have big enough pockets to compete (GE's Centricity, McKesson). Nobody is willing to risk their career/hosptial by writing an eight or nine figure cheque to an unproven enterprise to run their critical infrastructure. ![]() The decision makers at large hospitals are even more conservative than other large enterprises. I own a company that is attempting to modernize electronic medical records, and there are plenty of legitimate reasons why medical software is bad. ![]()
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