I've never experienced such a thing, but when I do, I'll be ready.
******************
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no subject
Date: 2020-11-03 10:42 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2020-11-03 10:48 pm (UTC)It doesn't apply if you keep paper notes.
\o/ So I'm exempt.
And it turns out the therapy-technology-law experts who are the industry leading consultants on this sort of thing have confessed that they also keep paper notes.
So right now, it's sure looking like the right solution is for the entire field to walk away from technology for notes.
FORWARD INTO THE PAST, BABY! IF IT WAS GOOD ENOUGH FOR FREUD, IT'S GOOD ENOUGH FOR US.
ETA: also, for the record, yes: every edict from the Feds about medical record keeping has generally come with astronomical costs for providers. The Feds extorted hospitals – anyone who accepts medicare or medicaid – into adopting electronic health records, at staggering cost. Cost for the software, cost for the hardware to run it, cost for customization (enterprise class software is simply not runable out of the box), cost for training every single employee, cost for increased IT head count on an ongoing basis, and massive, massive, massive cost for lost labor in the transition. And while we were promised these systems would make medical recordkeeping faster and better, the truth is they slow doctors down and waste more of their time.
AMERICA, THIS IS WHERE YOUR HEALTHCARE DOLLARS ARE ACTUALLY GOING.