Difficult Doctors

Difficult doctor (def): a physician that disagrees with, or fails to immediately and graciously comply with, the expressed directive of any nurse manager or hospital administrator. [cf., Policy relating to the Reporting and Disciplinary Procedures for Difficult Doctors]

Many of you are painfully aware that our work environment has recently become–how best to phrase it?  Silly? Unpleasant? Challenging? Flat out, batshit crazy?  Yes, let’s go with that last one. (See Doctors Without Barbers). And I’m not even going to grace these new policies with any discussion, because they are so imbecilic as to not merit even this amount of attention.

(Doctor, you can’t leave the OR without a jacket. The short, paper one. No, no, no, doctor, not the full length disposable one.  Oh my god no, not the full length disposable yellow one, that’s only for isolation and an alarm will go off if you walk out of here with that on. Wear this one, it’s required, but make sure to take it off and replace it with the full length disposable one you had in your hand a minute ago if you step into the hallway with the brown guardrail to tell the family that your patient survived their operation, then take the full-length but not yellow one off and put the short coat back on when walking between the brown railed hallway and back to the OR, then remove the short coat before scrubbing for your next surgery but you can’t don a surgical mask after donning your coat because that would lead to shedding of dangerous skin cells onto the coat, rendering the entire environment a potential health hazard but you can’t go into the OR without a mask and you can’t walk down the hall with a mask dangling on your chest and you can’t walk down that hall to get a mask without the coat on so I guess you’ll just have to not operate any more today, okay? Sorry, doctor, it’s the policy. Have a nice day.)

Those in  the business know that I’m not making any of that up. Really.

Dread_Pirate_Roberts_by_bryanhumphrey

So, I received the following email recently from our hospital administrator:

Dear Surgical Physicians, Nurses, Techs, and all Operative Colleagues:

As you are aware, our policy for Surgical Attire is based on National Standards, and was developed to ensure our commitment to Patient Safety , which remains our core value.  In addition, proper surgical attire continues to be a major focus for both CMS and the State Department of Health.  Unfortunately, many of our sister hospitals (as well as hospitals in other systems) have found themselves in a position where physicians and staff members were not following policy to the specified level, and were subsequently placed on periods of Immediate Jeopardy, in which they were at risk of losing their Medicare and Medicaid funding.

We are doing everything we can as a hospital to follow our policy and avoid situations such as that.  I am attaching our Surgical Attire policy as a refresher of the expectations at [our hospital].  At the current time, I will remind you that ALL hair is to be covered, including sideburns and hair at the nape of the neck, as well as any facial hair (i.e. mustache).  Our strongest recommendation is that to make it most easy for you to comply, surgical hoods should be worn, often in conjunction with a surgical cap, to allow maximum of hair coverage with minimal effort.  Mirrors have been added around the operating theater to allow each physician and staff member to best police themselves.

You are all professionals, and your professional obligation is that you will comply with hospital policy.  We will be conducting periodic observations to make sure we are compliant.  I would ask that all staff please look to help any other physician or staff member who has not noticed that there is errant hair, or other non-compliance with the policy.

I am confident that we, as a hospital, and YOU as the Operative team, will be compliant and successful.

Sincerely,

[name deleted]

Vice President Medical Affairs & Chief Medical Office

 

So much of what is wrong with our current OR work environment is summarized in this completely nonsensical email.  Let’s discuss:

“As you are aware, our policy for Surgical Attire is based on National Standards”–actually, no, it isn’t.  It is an ungrammatical, unscientific, ad hoc mash-up of AORN policy recommendations, in-house silliness, and a good bit of complete nonsense.  It has no basis in JCAHO or Department of Health standards. It directly contradicts recommendations by many national and international scientific organizations, including the American College of Surgery Manual of Perioperative Care and a recent policy statement by the ACS. There is nothing about it that even approaches a rational scientific basis or accepted standards, national or otherwise.  It in no way represents any form of consensus of surgeons, nurses, or surgical technicians, either within the institution or at the level of representative organizations.  It was authored by a couple of nurse administrators who haven’t seen the inside of an operating room in decades while sitting in a hospital conference room with a few administrators lacking any clinical insight whatsoever and absent any physician, anesthesiologist,  or surgeon who might contribute rational insight into the process; i.e., dissent. The resulting policy was then filed in the Manual of Procedures and Policy without benefit of review by the Chief of Surgery, his designate, the OR committee, or as an agenda item at the surgical departmental meeting.  Or by the Chief of Anesthesia, or at the anesthesia departmental meeting. Or by the Chief of OB/Gyn, or at their departmental meeting. Or by the Chief of Orthopedics, or at the ortho departmental meeting. Of course it wasn’t, because the physicians affected would’ve pointed out that the document was nonsense. They would be “difficult.”

“developed to ensure our commitment to Patient Safety , which remains our core value”–unfortunately, your core value has been repeatedly demonstrated to be maximizing revenue. Capitalizing the phrase “Patient Safety” in all official emails does not make it your priority. You have an amazing capacity to re-interpret your institutional commitment to Patient Safety if this proves too expensive. It just so happens that arbitrary rules regarding surgical attire costs the hospital nothing.  And by the way, if you truly believe that the type of hat worn by a surgeon or OR nurse is an issue of patient safety, you really shouldn’t be allowed to come to work as a hospital administrator.

“Our strongest recommendation is that to make it most easy for you to comply, surgical hoods should be worn, often in conjunction with a surgical cap, to allow maximum of hair coverage with minimal effort.”–of course, this recommendation makes no sense, which is obvious to anyone who has actually set foot in an OR, and creates a situation in which you will be unable to operate, or keep from sweating into your patient’s wound (recent policy change takes away the ability to control OR room temperature without contacting an administrator), or breathe. We’re just interested in making it “most easy for you to comply.” Comply or die, whatever. Minimal effort.

“Mirrors have been added around the operating theater to allow each physician and staff member to best police themselves.”–I have no words.

“I would ask that all staff please look to help any other physician or staff member who has not noticed that there is errant hair, or other non-compliance with the policy.”–Please report your fellow workers to the authorities. You may be awarded the coveted “Employee of the Month.”

And more recently, yet another hospital email regarding this same subject ended with the following threat:

Please review the attached Guidelines for Operating Room Environment and Surgical Attire Policy.

Non-compliance with our policy will compromise the Hospital’s position with the DOH and may lead to financial penalty for the Hospital.   For physicians who are found to be in violation of our policy, a ‘non-adherence to policy that compromises patient safety’ note will be placed in the credentials file as part of their OPPE.

So, it’s okay that the OR nursing supervisor is “surprised” to realize that my hospital has no CO2 cylinders available when the tank goes empty halfway through my laparoscopic procedure, which results in no incident report, meeting, or repercussion of any sort, but if I fail to wear a disposable short coat while walking between the OR and the recovery room I will be cited as “compromising patient safety.”  A note will be placed in my permanent record.

Seriously.

 

Exorcising the Demon of Digital Documentation: EMR Part 3

The almost over half-dozen regular visitors to this blog know that I much prefer “snarky” over “wonky.”  However, this is serious stuff (see parts 1 and part 2 of this discussion), and I’m sorry to say that we’ll be eschewing the alliteratively amusing yet enlightening parable on this one for the tediously technical.  Non-physicians are encouraged to move on to this entertaining dog video:

entertaining dog video

Seriously, it’s a great video, where these dogs are dressed up as US Supreme Court Justices.  Even if you think you’re going to read this wonkishly tiresome tirade, take a moment first.  It’ll make the process more palatable.  Or whiskey.  That works, too.

As you may have gleaned from Parts 1 and 2, I believe the current state of the EMR mandated implementation to be no less than a public health crisis.  Over the top?  I don’t think so.  Please ask any physician, nurse, or health care practitioner in the country.  I’ll wait.

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See?  We have to take meaningful, immediate actions to save patient lives and stop the documentary disease that is degrading medical record keeping even as we speak.  My recommendations, therefore, are simple and immediate.  Here they are:

Step 1:  CMS is to immediately suspend the “meaningful use” mandate.  Financial bonuses for those practitioners who implemented EMR should, of course, remain in place.  These folks laid out a lot of good money based on this expectation.  But we should immediately lift the threat of financial penalties for those practices that have not yet fallen down this well.  This will also come as a great relief to the hundreds of practices that paid tens of thousands of dollars to install an EMR and have, in practice, chucked it into the closet because they found it unworkable, and therefore have not been able to meet meaningful use criteria.

Step 2:  Immediately charge the Bureau of Weights and Measures to develop, in a timely fashion, minimum standards for electronic medical record keeping.  Believe me, I would never have thought this up on my own–this was the plan back in the day when we were all talking about how great it would be to have an EMR.  Seriously, the Bureau of Weights and Measures.  These standards should be developed with input from the hospital industry, physicians, midlevel providers, nurses, and database engineers specializing in intercommunicability and security.  This standards-making process should actively exclude representatives from the current EMR companies.  The process should pay no mind for backward compatability concerns.  These are the assholes who jumped the gun in the first place and forced us to buy dangerous, flawed products at exorbitant prices.  Screw ’em.

Step 3.  Require commercially offered EMR programs to be tested and certified by the FDA as a medical device.  You think I’m kidding?  I’m not kidding.  The EMR is a medical device, a device that affects every single patient care interaction.  A bad EMR is dangerous to patients.  If the FDA requires that my felt tip skin marker be certified before I use it to mark a patient, yeah, I think they should check to make sure that the EMR doesn’t systematically screw up my orders. Not such a crazy concept.  Oh, and the current multibillion dollar products already on the market should be retroactively required to pass this testing.  No grandfather clause here–these programs are flawed and dangerous.  Let the FDA sort it out by soliciting open comments from the consumers (that would be us).  They will be swamped with helpful information.

Step 4.  Governmental funding of a standard EMR to be made available to any and all practioners/healthcare facilities at no charge.  This whole EMR idea began when a bright young (or maybe not so young, I wasn’t there) physician stood up (might have just raised his hand, not sure) and pointed out in a committee meeting during the early ’90s that the VA system had this pretty cool computer system that was better than paper charting.  Say what you want about the VA, they were the first and the best at this EMR stuff.  Then we all said, yeah, that sounds great, let’s do for the country what the VA is doing for our vets.  Which, of course, we completely screwed up.  So I propose that the federal government pay the money to improve upon the VA program to develop a simple, effective, broadly applicable, safe EMR.  Then the federal government should make this program available as the minimum default option for any and all health care practitioners and facilities for free.  Because we paid for it already with our tax dollars through VA funding.  This program, of course, wouldn’t be the “bells and whistles” pretty thing that private industry will provide for profit.  But having this free product would establish a baseline that all the other manufacturers will have to exceed if they expect us to lay out a lot of our hard-earned cash.  Because right now we’re paying for a grossly inferior product.

I can already hear my Malthusiastic colleagues and trade group lobbyists saying that these recommendations are bogus, just more government regulation/interference with the free market, blah, blah, blah.  Hey guys–we tried that, and we got this.  So no, it didn’t work.  Mandating purchase of a product immediately disrupts the free market.  Believe me, if we weren’t forced into it, very few of us would’ve purchased the grossly defective products currently on the market at extortionist prices.  The free market will be effective at leading to competitive pricing of an improved product if we take away the threat of near-term penalties and establish standards for this medical instrument. Then, and only then, can the free market work its magic.

I urge my colleagues, representatives, and medical societies to take up this challenge.  Nothing in our current practice of health care is more important.

Death by Electronic Medical Record Keeping: Part 2

Sequel to Automated Malpractice and Digital Dishonesty, the first in a series dealing with the disaster which has befallen our health care system.

The single, most powerful tool employed by every physician in the care of patients is the medical record.  It is the tool that impacts the care of every single patient.  It is the tool that makes difficult diagnoses possible.  It organizes and makes possible treatment modalities of every type.  It allows collaboration between multiple health care practitioners.  It prevents redundancies, harmful treatment interactions, errors in therapy.  It makes possible quality improvement.  It is the basis of clinical research and the datum upon which discoveries are made and ineffective treatments eliminated.IMG_1302

The medical record is the fundamental instrument of all patient care.

Take away the medical record and you might as well eliminate the use of antibiotics, of vaccines, of anesthesia, of blood typing–because every aspect of these treatments and their safe implementation requires an accurate, accessible medical record.

We are currently in the process of destroying the patient medical record as an accurate, dependable tool in the care of patients.  As a direct consequence of our current actions, patients are being harmed.  Quality assurance programs are being compromised.  Future research will be flawed.

This phenomenon is being witnessed across every aspect of medical practice and in every patient care venue in this country.  It is being experienced by every physician, nurse, and allied health care provider.  It is incontrovertible.  It is, quite simply, a national disgrace and a health care emergency.

The previous system of writing notes and orders with a pen in a paper chart was flawed, of course.  It had the drawback of being, on occasion, uninterpretable.  This led to errors.  It had the drawback of being difficult to access.  This led to inadequate communication, redundant testing, inadequate treatment.  There was a definite and defined need for a better system.  No one would argue differently.  The new system needed to be:

i.  accurate, ie., legible

ii. accessible to all patient care providers, including physician offices, emergency departments, hospitals, clinics, researchers, auditers

iii. systematically better than a bunch of pieces of paper stapled together: that is, it should intrinsically avoid dosage errors, medication conflicts, redundancies, etc.

Obviously, the new electronic medical record should be better than paper.  Paper required health care practitioners in the form of nurses, PA’s, and pharmacists to interpret a physician’s desires and catch our mistakes before they reached the patient.  If I ordered an antibiotic for a patient and the patient had a history of allergy to that antibiotic, a key patient fact that I was not aware of at the time of treatment,  I relied on a clinically astute nurse or a pharmacist with the patient’s allergy flag to catch it and stop me before I injured the patient.  Obviously, this was a problem, because some nurses and pharmacists, just like some physicians, are more experienced, conscientious, knowledgable, and savvy than others.  Better to have a system that automatically and consistently checks every order against the patient’s documented record for such a life-threatening conflict.

The intent, at the national/governmental level, was to create and mandate the implementation of just such a system, a system to address the known failings of the existing paper-based system and improve patient care.  But the reality rapidly superceded the intent.  Through a tortured labyrinth of governmental committees and corporate boardrooms, we allowed the private, profit-motivated sector to leap into the gap between good standards and mandated implementation.  In retrospect, we all should have seen this coming from many miles away.  A government mandate that would require the purchase of a product by every doctor, hospital, and clinic in America?  How much was that worth?  Obviously, a great deal.  So why wait for standards?  Why develop a good system, a worthy product, when we can beat the competiton and sell a cheap, untested, poor product and require these guys to buy it whether they like or not, whether it works or not, even if it’s intrinsically dangerous?

Which is how we arrived to the point we find ourselves at now.  Hospitals, physican practices, and clinics have been forced to expend millions of dollars to purchase poorly designed electronic medical record systems.  Physicians across the country are now required to spend dozens of hours training up on a variety of unstandardized systems.  They are required to become facile in the care of patients utilizing deeply flawed instruments that do not approach the minimum level of quality to allow safe patient care.  The problems exhibited by the current state of the governmentally mandated art range from the simply irritating, to the amazingly stupid, and all the way to the point of the systematically murderous.  I do not exaggerate.  Allow me to provide examples:

The simply irritating:  Each hospital at which I care for patients has its own brand of electronic medical record (EMR).  Each EMR requires a unique user name and password.  But some of these hospitals also have a separate system for charting in their Emergency Department.  Many have a separate system to access electronic ordering, or another system to view radiology images, and another system to complete medical records, and yet another system to access labarotory results.  Additionally, a separate system exists for electronic prescribing (also mandated), not to mention the required State Narcotic Abuse Database Access, also with a unique user ID and password.  None of these systems, user names, or passwords are centralized or mutual in any way.  And in the name of patient security, every one of these systems requires that I change my password every thirty to ninety days.  But not in the same thirty day cycle.  And not to anything that remotely resembled my previous password.  Which leads to the constant juggling of multiple passwords with no chance of providing anything near efficient patient care.  Maddening.

In those practices that require efficient clinical care, the implementation of the EMR has been uniformly disastrous.  Patient office visits are now characterized by a screen interposed between the patient and the clinician, eye contact being a thing of past.  Documentation is terse, inadequate, and often plain untrue.  Most opthamologists and many other physicians have been forced to hire a new category of health care worker, the EMR documentician, to follow behind the physician and enter information into the computer.  This has led to enormous additional expense and a new avenue for inaccuracy.  I routinely hear from my colleagues how they have to spend their evenings at home doing EMR documentation from the patients that they saw during the office hours earlier that day, as if anyone could expect to recall the subtleties of dozens of patient interactions six hours later.  Simply insane.

Amazingly stupid:  Two of the hospitals I work in utilize the Allscripts EMR system.  This system features the amazingly stupid feature of not superceding previous orders when such a feature is obvious and required.  The diet order is a case in point.  When a physician enters a diet for a patient, the previous diet order should be stopped.  But no, this is not the case.  So my patients routinely have several, conflicting diet orders running contemporaneously.  I have discussed this on over a dozen occasions with the IT department, the physican IT laison, and presented to the IT/Patient services committee.  No patient, I explain repeatedly, ever needs more than one diet at a time.  They all patiently explain to me that such a change is not possible in this system.  So my patients routinely receive trays for clear liquid diets, full liquid diets, regular diets, specialty diets, all at the same time.  We depend on the dieticians to sort this all out on a daily basis.  The waste in effort and food, not to mention the costs associated with cancelled procedures and the morbidity of inappropriately administered diets, is intolerable, but apparently unfixable with the current state of technology.

Systematically murderous:  As I have mentioned, the key to good medical care is the conscientious application of patient information to allow informed decision making.  The old system of paper charting was deficient in this aspect.  A new, electronic system, should permit artificial intelligence applications to prevent many common errors, such as administration of inappropriate medications, wrong dosage, or duplication of treatments or testing.  The system should be designed to enhance patient care and safety.  Instead, we have a system that actually decreases patient safety and requires constant vigilance on the part of all health care providers to prevent system-incurred errors.  This is the exact opposite of what is needed and appropriate, but it is happening constantly.  In the postoperative setting, needed DVT prophylaxis medication is often ordered, but the system fails to reliably discontinue the same prophylaxis order from the preoperative period. This results in two or three doses of the blood-thinning medication arriving on the floor for administration to the patient.  Usually, the nurse is sharp enough to detect the duplication and send the extra doses back to the pharmacy, but if there has been a shift change or breakdown in communication, extra doses may be administered with resulting complications.  The system must be designed to make us better, not require us to police new, intrinsic challenges to good patient care.  The current situation is unacceptable.

Not to mention, medicolegally compromising:  One of the nationally implemented EMR systems fails to close out patient encounters when the patient is discharged.  This leads to the occasional situation wherein a treating physician accidentally places multiple orders into the system for a patient, not realizing that the orders are being entered into a patient encounter that is no longer appropriate.  There is no systemic prevention for such an error.  So in the middle of the night when an emergency patient requires admission to the ICU or is to be taken emergently to the OR, dozens of orders are entered, but not implemented.  The physician is told that his orders are missing, so he or his associate/resident/PA re-enters all the orders.  But now there exist a slew of orders added to a past encounter that were never acknowledged or administered.  Lord only knows what will be made of that when the chart is eventually reviewed for quality or legal concerns.  Good luck with that in a court five or six years after the occurrence.

What is obvious from the foregoing tirade is that the current implementation of the mandated EMR fails to meet the minimum requirements that I laid out in the beginning of this post.  It is legible, but it is inaccurate.  It is not accessible, due to a complete lack of interoperability standards.  As a system, it fails to improve patient care, but rather introduces an entire new class of systemic challenges to good, safe patient care.  The current system is simply unacceptable.  In the next post, we will discuss the remarkably simple solution to the current situation.

Automated Malpractice and Digital Dishonesty

Quite a few years ago, I was conducting morning teaching rounds on the surgical service of a university teaching hospital.  Teaching rounds are a combination of patient care and education, the educational aspects directed at the bevy of residents and medical students in attendance.  We stood outside the room of a postoperative patient who wasn’t doing well.  Either was the senior medical student struggling to explain just what was the reason that the patient’s health was failing.Minolta DSC

“What’s the white count this morning?” I asked the man.  He was an over-achieving rotator from another school, doing a senior elective on our service.  He suddenly blanched.

“I’m sorry?” he said.

“Don’t be.  Just tell us the white blood cell count of the patient this morning.”  I waited.  He looked at his junior resident.  The junior resident looked at the senior resident.  The senior resident looked at the chief resident.  The chief resident looked at me.  He shrugged sheepishly.  “No one knows the patient’s white count this morning?”  I asked.  Everyone looked at their shoes.  “Did you operate on this patient?” I asked the student.  He nodded.  “And though the patient trusted you enough to let you operate on him, you just don’t care if he lives or dies at this point?”

“I care,” the student replied, indignant.

“Just not enough to check his white blood cell count, is that it?” I asked.  The student wisely said nothing.  “It would be reasonable to suspect that your patient is suffering from an infectious complication from your operation.  If you do not make the diagnosis soon, he will die from your operation.  I suggest that you check his white blood count.”  Everyone nodded assent.  We moved on to the next patient.

Twenty-four hours later, we all stood once again in front of the same patient’s room.  The patient had spiked a high fever overnight.  “White count?” I asked the same student.

There was the briefest pause before the medical student said, “Twelve point two.”  Which was a lie.  He was a pretty good liar, looking me straight in the eyes as he said it.  I had checked the patient’s white blood cell count before rounds.

“Take this dime,” I said, handing a coin to the student, “and call your mother.  Tell her there is serious doubt about your ever becoming a doctor.”  All twenty members attending rounds looked at me with a blank, uncomprehending stare.  “Really?” I asked.  “Nobody’s ever seen The Paper Chase?”  They all shook their heads.  The student had gone beet red with embarrassment.  “Look,” I said.  “You screwed up.  I told you to check this patient’s white count.  You didn’t.  You have a responsibility to this patient.”  The student, his resident, and the chief resident started to explain about all the traumas cared for overnight, about how busy the service had been saving lives.  I held up my hand.  “I don’t care.  You screwed up. You all screwed up, by letting him screw up.  You are failing this patient.  But that’s not why I’m pissed.  We all make mistakes, every one of us.  Every day.  Can’t be helped. But you can’t lie about it.  You can’t stand here and pretend that you did something that you didn’t.  You can’t give me false information, information that may lead to my decision regarding the care of this patient, just because you’re too weak to admit that you didn’t do what you should’ve.  What this patient needed.  That’s not acceptable.  You can’t lie.  Not to me, not to this patient, not to your fellow residents or students.  Because if I can’t trust you, I can’t let you take care of my patients.  Worse, you are lying to yourself.  If you can’t trust that what you wrote in a chart last month was actually something you did–and not just something you made up because you didn’t have the time to actually check–you will hurt your patient.  Lawyers can lie.  Accountants can lie.  Stockbrokers can lie.  Surgeons can’t lie.  Surgeons who lie kill patients.  Go check the patient’s white count.  And while you’re at it,” I said, turning to the senior resident, “book the patient for reoperation this afternoon.  Because his white count this morning is 22,000 and I think your patient has an anastomotic leak.”

The embarrassed, hotshot medical student went on to be a very good orthopedic surgeon.  I like to think that he learned something that day about patient care and responsibility.  I don’t know for sure.  I am sure, however, that it no longer matters.  Every physician is now systematically dishonest on a daily basis.  Every one of us.

During the past two years, hospitals and medical practices across the country have been required to implement an electronic medical record system.  Every single health care practitioner has been falsifying patient records on a daily basis as a result.  Not by a desire to be dishonest, or any lack of effort on behalf of our patients.  It is now a systematic requirement.  Which is particularly ironic, because the intention of the electronic medical record mandate was to increase the quality and accuracy of medical record keeping.  The result has been the exact opposite.

“You can’t be a doctor without a pen,” the adage goes, because the foundation of all medical care is the medical record.  This was actually a major plot point in a book by Tom Clancy (may he rest in peace), where the ophthalmologist wife of our hero, Jack Ryan, points out that “if it wasn’t written down, it didn’t happen.” Patriot Games, I think.  I could be wrong.  Anyways, it’s true.  If it happened, you document it.  That way, everyone knows what was done, how, and why.  Want to know if I removed the appendix while I was inside that patient during surgery?  Read my operative report.  If I didn’t say I removed it, the appendix is still there. The corollary was also true: If it was written down, it must have happened.  If I wrote the lab test down, I checked it.  Simple.  Patient care depends on it.

Nothing’s so simple anymore.  In the era of the electronic medical record, everything is already written down, whether it’s true or not, whether I saw it or not.  Prepopulated rubrics, standardized physicals with normal findings documented by default, cut-and-paste patient histories with negative answers already filled in for all those questions the doctor may or may not have actually asked.  We can’t trust any of it any more, because we didn’t write it.  The computer did.  And nobody, no matter how professional or conscientious, can possibly undo all the stuff automatically done by the computer in the name of quality patient care.  Except most of it is bullshit.  Almost all of it.  Even the stuff I did myself, last month or last year.  When I look at a physical exam form, I can’t be sure that I really felt the patient’s pulse as it says on the record, or did the computer fill that in and I didn’t take the time to delete it?  Patient care decisions are now made on the basis of this flawed type of documentation every day.

It wasn’t supposed to be this way.  I was in Washington when the first discussions were being held about implementing an electronic medical record.  The advantages are obvious.  No more unintelligible doctor writing leading to patients getting the wrong drug.  Universal access to critical information on a real-time basis, eliminating repeated tests and procedures.  Less waste, greater safety.  It was all completely laudable.  Government and private industry allied to make health care better, cheaper, safer.  First step was to develop ground rules, a basis for all records to be standardized, to be developed by the US Bureau of Weights and Measures.  Never happened.  Too much money was at stake.  The government mandate, well intentioned but flawed in its implementation, was usurped by the greed of private industry.  Billions of dollars were at stake.  Lives were too, but nobody really stopped to notice.

Last year, I was called upon to be an expert witness in the defense of two emergency medicine physicians in New York.  The ER doc’s had heroically resuscitated a motorcycle rider who had suffered a traumatic amputation of his leg.  Sadly, the man had died from his injuries.  The family sued, alleging incompetence on the part of the treating doctors.  As far as I could tell from my review, the doctors had done everything they could possibly have done to save the man’s life.  I testified to this opinion in court.  With a dramatic flourish, the plaintiff’s attorney projected a ten foot high image of a page from the hospital record.  “Explain this, Dr. Geller!” the attorney demands, using his laser pointer to demonstrate where the medical record states that pulses were present and normal in both feet.  “These doctors didn’t even examine the patient, didn’t even realize that the patient’s leg was missing!” the attorney declaimed.

“No, not at all,” I had to explain to the jury.  “These doctors were so busy trying to save this man’s life, they didn’t have the time to uncheck the boxes on the computer form where it automatically fills in normal pulses for the feet of every single patient.”  It took me almost a half hour of explanation to the jury.  I thought I sounded like an idiot trying to explain this ridiculousness.  In the end the jury understood, and the physicians were acquitted.  It’s like something out of Joseph Heller’s novel, Catch 22.  Or MASH.  But with real dead people.