7 Comments
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Jayne Doe's avatar

Errors in patient medical transcription happens all the time.

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Jane Nelson's avatar

I have a family member who once worked for Epic. It was a mess. Medical offices are stunned to discover their records aren't permanent. At one point an update scrubbed the due dates ... imagine going to a routine OB appt and your doctor no longer has your due date on file.

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Bellatrix's avatar

Follow the money as Sidney Powell says!

Thank you Dr. Bowden, your detective skills are almost as great as your medical skills!

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W.'s avatar

You are exactly right. Data can be biased and skewed to fit the sponsors of the narrative. It's like elections... who counts the votes. When you read or see a questionable poll, report, study or survey, look at the author or who funded aka sponsored the research. It should make sense pretty quickly.

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mcgdoc's avatar

EHR enabled Copy and paste to generate billable income makes it untrustworthy and irrelevant clinically at all. Following the pseudoscientific expert opinions based Guidelines renders the record useless for any meaningful analysis. The Newly minted Stargate Ai will fail just as the failed IBM Watson Health. Hundreds of billions will be wasted.

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Angelina's avatar

About 20 years ago, Cancer Care Ontario, Canada wasted $1 billion on EMR.

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Edwin Leap's avatar

I had no idea Epic was involved in the vaccine passports. Thanks for the information!

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