“Successful electronic health record (EHR) adoption not only improves quality of care by making patient information easily accessible, it also provides valuable clinical decision support. In addition, organizations benefit from streamlined operations — enabling physicians to spend less time on charting and documentation, and more time engaging in face-to-face interactions with patients.
Despite these obvious advantages, however, many physicians are resistant to adopting EHR systems.
A number of factors account for this resistance. First and foremost, organizations are leery of the cost and disruption that can sometimes accompany the conversion from manual to automated processes. Second, a portion of older physicians — who often serve as the leaders in an organization — are typically less comfortable with new technologies than their younger counterparts. And finally, some physicians believe that taking the time to electronically document patient visits will negatively impact patient interaction because it means spending time in front of a computer screen rather than with the patient.”
Article
Don A. Solberg, Kathryn L Houck and Jim Roberts, Advance, 1 July 2009

