June 25, 2009 | Elizabeth Jones | Comments 0
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Hospital makes physicians’ notes accessible to patients

physician_paperworkBeth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston is launching a one-year Open Notes campaign, which will enable 25,000 to 35,000 patients to read the notes their physicians write after each visit, according to The Boston Globe. The campaign, which will involve 100 practitioners, is sponsored by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and is aimed at finding out whether patients who read their medical notes will better remember and understand their physicians’ instructions and catch mistakes.

Physicians, of course, are apprehensive that patients will unnecessarily worry about precautionary tests or take offense to certain comments, including those regarding patients’ weight. Physicians are also worried that patients will e-mail numerous follow-up questions asking for clarification on the notes, which are written for other doctors involved in the patients care and may involve abbreviations and medial terminology that patients don’t understand. For example, a physician may use “SOB” in a medical note, but patients may interpret that, well…differently.

However, the promise of transparency and reduced medical errors makes the experiment worth a shot. It will be interesting to see if patients will take advantage of the opportunity to view the notes and if they find them helpful.  What’s your perspective, as a healthcare professional and as a patient?


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Elizabeth Jones About the Author: Elizabeth (Liz) Jones is an associate editor at HCPro. She writes and contributes to several monthly newsletters including Medical Staff Briefing, Hospitalist Leadership Advisor, and Credentialing and Peer Review Legal Insider. Liz graduated from Salem (MA) State College in 2003 with a B.A. in professional writing. Before joining HCPro, Liz wrote for a national monthly business publication where she gained experience in executive-level business and healthcare issues.

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