Contrary to popular belief, even hospitals with electronic health records (EHRs) have information silos—and lots of paper in those information silos.

Just think about all of the faxed physician orders and lab results that still exist despite EHRs. While these paper documents sit on a machine or in someone’s inbox, other providers are unaware of them, which creates costly inefficiencies and delays in care.

In fact, according to The Paperless Project, large organizations lose a document every 12 seconds, and each lost document costs from $350-$700—not to mention the potential cost to patient care.

 

On the other hand, capturing paper documents like physician orders or lab results electronically at the point of entry establishes efficient workflows that quickly place up-to-date information in the EHR. This data driven strategy gives providers a common, online view of each patient’s records, which results in improved care collaboration before, during and after a hospital visit.

 

Eliminating the departmental silos caused by paper-based processes is not simply a matter of scanning documents at the end of a particular workflow. Instead, it requires breaking down bottlenecks and delays across the enterprise by gathering information from multiple sources, then using data repositories and analytics to improve how patient information is leveraged wherever patient care is provided.

Departmental processes are improved by understanding how technology facilitates more accurate and efficient information capture and exchange. For example, rather than relaying lab results by touching a piece of paper three or four times before capturing it electronically, intelligent work queue scanning can be used at the point of entry to ensure the information is readily available in a more timely fashion.

 

We know paper will never completely go away in healthcare. The key is to put smart technologies and processes in place to break down departmental silos and capture information as quickly and efficiently as possible across the continuum of care. Without data silos, providers see a more complete patient record—allowing them to make better decisions and provide higher quality care.

To learn more about how to bring your healthcare organization into the digital age or to contact us directly, click here.