Why physicians love to hate EMRS.
I have never heard a physician shout with glee, “yay, we’re getting an EMR!!!”
Physicians love to hate this latest technology, and for good reason. Here’s why we hate ‘em:
- EMRs are comlicated. When we had paper charts we wrote our notes on one side of the paper, and our orders on the other. Quite simple. If we had to read a note from a different doctor, we flipped through the pages. (Hopefuly it was legible.) We would open the tab to the lab results and look at them. (Now, don’t forget that half the time you couldn’t find the chart!!!)
- EMRs are not intuitive. EMR geeks have given us 10 different ways to do one thing. We are simple souls– we want one way to do one thing. We wrote our orders on the paper and handed them to the ward clerk. We don’t care about 7 different ways to order a lab test or medication, we just want to get it done.
- EMRs make us learn a whole new skill set. We now have to “navigate”, and “cut and paste”, and use “smart phrases.” We also have to know how to type. This wasn’t part of our medical education, and we perceive it to take time away from what we need to do–take care of patients.
- EMRs make us feel like clerks. When my hospital went to order entry, the clerks vanished. ‘Nuff said.
- EMRs don’t mimic our work flow. When I work on paper, I take my note out, and have labs and other notes open on the table in front of me, so I can synthesize data and come up with a coherent plan. EMRs make it difficult to mimic this work flow.
- EMRs don’t talk to each other. There are a kazillion different EMRs out there that hospitals, offices and clinics are adopting. Those of us that work at multiple different settings have to learn multiple different EMRs.
- EMR bulders forget that the EMR is a tool, not the end product!!! The end product is patient care. The tool should be used to enhance and deliver improved patient care.
You would think that I am a part of the anti-EMR faction. Well, I’m not. I’m a pragmatist. EMRs are here to stay. Make the best of it. Be an influencer in a positve light–get involved to make EMRs better at your institution!
Tags: EMRs, physician acceptance

Our EMR is 90s technology, All it enables is better data massaging for billing for the hospitals. I dont think it was meant to improve OUR workflow/safety etc. Mostly to meet hospital billing needs. Once I accepted that it was never meant to increase anybody’s producitvity, I made peace with how ridiculous it is. It certainly seriously affects nursing signouts due to the fragmented way it presents information
As per the physicians the medical EMR industry controlled by multi-million dollar software companies where you need specialized training and an IT department just to use it.
Few days ago I was trying to manage my medical records through EMR, while searching I found secured EMR company. A solution for the most discriminating professional. System itself takes the “pain” out of data management.
The solution is a web-based system that will store your medical records or digitize your existing medical records – allowing the user/professional the ability to access them anywhere in the world.
There is no special training or manuals to read, giving the average customer the chance to actually be able to afford and use something that only large corporations could once afford, while having the ability to execute multi-million dollar functions.
The company is setting the standard for everyone.