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Click
here for photos from the events.
Long waits to see the doctor, collect
prescriptions and make payments at the National Skin Centre may
be a thing of
the past.
A new Electronic Medical Record System, a first here, is meant
to provide a seamless patient work-flow system.
The paperless system was rolled out on March 20, the centre announced
on Saturday.
This is what it promises:
Instead of prescribing medicines via a computer system, then making
printouts for patients, it will simply transmit the prescription
straight to the prescription counter.
There is also a real-time online appointment system with a self-registration
kiosk on every floor.
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self registration kiosk
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Patients can book, change and cancel appointments
on-line. Two days before the appointment, a reminder in the form
of a text message
will be sent to the patient’s mobile phone.
On the day of the appointment, the patient simply scans his identity
card of appointment card at the self-registration kiosk. A printout
will tell him his queue number and the consultation room he should
go to.
The system can also track waiting times. When
this gets too long, another doctor can then be asked to help
out in the clinic, or
patients can be moved to another clinic, with the patient’s
electronic case files being transferred immediately to the right
doctor.
Doctors can even tell patients how much they need to pay. Before,
patients would find out only at the billing counter.
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doctor using Clinical Management
System
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The system is also designed to alert doctors
if they accidentally prescribe a drug that the patient is allergic
to. In three to five
years’ time, it will also be able to track which medicine
works best for each individual.
Early this month, the public health clusters,
SingHealth and National Healthcare Group, said they were planning
to introduce an electronic
prescription system and on-line tracking of patient’s medical
histories in their hospitals and polyclinics.
The skin centre’s system goes beyond this to reduce patients’ waiting
time and makes more productive use of the staff.
Designed by Malaysian-listed novaHEALTH, the $2 million system
took three years to complete.
The skin centre has already digitized its 250,000
records. Two million pages of patients’ records were scanned
into the system, at a cost of $250,000.
In case the system fails, records are backup every day to make
sure those required for the next day are available.
However, Professor Goh Chee Leok, the centre’s
medical director, said that it would not back up records with
printouts.
“It defeats the very purpose of going electronic,” he
said.
quote from The Straits Times, 29 March 2004
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