CASE STUDIES...


Pauline Robinson is a practice manager at Three Shires Hospital in Northampton.


 

Pauline says that she finds billing through Practice Manager to Healthcode "easy, quick and painless".

Why?

"I've been billing electronically for two years now and it's terribly direct: you just key in the details and everything goes through. For the previous seven years I worked on another automated system that relied on large paper based back-ups and there's a huge difference between the two. When the time came to change we took a look at various other systems. I went to several BUPA PA (Personal Assistant) mettings where they had different systems you could try, but in the end DGL's Practice Manager software was the natural choice. All in all it makes the billing process quick and easy. The account reminders are also excellent.

Working with EDI saves sending an invoice to the patient, and we're usually paid within ten days. We also save on postage, which pleases our accountant! The free DGL HEDI software is also a boon. In addition to providing the link required between your computer and Healthcode's website, it is also an excellent practice manager software package. One of its big advantages is that I only have to enter the patients details once - and once only - which is great when you work in an anaesthetist's practice with 15 consultants. All our annual accounts come straight off the computer and I can pull off any figures our consultants may need from their last two years' case work.

It's easy to use too.

Probably the best thing about DGL's Practice Manager software is its ease of use. One of our secretaries had it installed the other day and within two hours she was completely comfortable with it. I should add that a medical secretary in a private hospital is often left on her own with no IT support. With the Practice Manager software support is provided by DGL by email or over the phone. If you've got anything wrong they get back to you almost immediately. I had a problem last week and they took over, working through the computer modem, and solved it in minutes. The back-up is superb!"


Nicholas Lee, FRCS, FRCOphth,is a Consultant Ophthalmic Surgeon and the co-author of the ABC of Medical Computing BMJ.


Nicholas Lee, FRCS, FRCOphth,
is a Consultant Ophthalmic Surgeon
and the co-author of the ABC of
Medical Computing BMJ.
His specialist interests are medical
retina including diabetes and
diabetic screening, and age related
macular degeneration including
photodynamic therapy.


Figure 1: Picture of Practice Manager from screen This displays the
demographics on the patient from which the diagnosis, letters, notes
etc. may be created. The display is very large and easy for both
Doctor and patient to see. Navigation is aided by large buttons where possible and short keyboard cuts for the most popular
selections.

 

 

Figure 2: Vision chart The visual acuity part of the Electronic Patient
Record (EPR) in Practice Manager. Vision by entered by LogMar or
Snellen and is also displayed graphically. This graph may be
incorporated into the patient's letter if required.

 


Figure 3: Patient information screen This is menu for printing out
information for patients on their eye conditions. New handouts
can easily be written and incorporated or updated as information
changes.

 

 

 

 

 

Introduction

Computing has evolved a long way since the first computers of the 1980s and to some extent doctors have been left behind. The National Health Service is recognizing this and investing large amounts into Information Technology and one notable improvement is placing a computer on every consultant's desk. This gives the opportunity for doctors to use IT more in their clinical practice. However it is naïve to think that merely putting a computer on a doctor's desk will bring benefits; it is a far more complex issue: Factors to consider are:

1) Availability of programs to do the task - Are these well written and mature, from companies that are going to be around for the long term?

2) Are they supported by a good IT help desk?

3) Is the program linked to the PAS (Patient Administration System) system for demographics or able to exchnage data with other Electronic Patient Record (EPR) programs?

4) Doctors are very mobile - can the programs be used elswehere off site?

5) How is the data backed up?

6) Is the data secure and confidential?

This article looks at how IT can assist in the decision making process in Ophthalmology.A good source of the way the government views IT is the Department of Health (DOH) website: www.doh.gov.uk/ipu/develop/ Information for Health (1998) document sets out the strategy to change the way the NHS uses information. Many of these initiatives will fundamentally change the way we work whether in the clinic on the ward or in the community. Many of these changes have begun and the level of IT knowledge that we all are required to know is increasing as we get involved in ever more sophisticated projects.

Electronic Patient Record (EPR)

The government Electronic Patient Record (EPR) scheme has a number of stages but the early stages are more to do with appointments and management aspects than clinical. The plan by 2010 is to have all of a patient's clinical information available from where ever the patient is being seen or has been seen in the past, be this in the GP setting, community or in the hospital available at your terminal. GP's have had EPR for many years, all be them quite old systems but do contain a wealth of information and it certainly would be useful for secondary care to have access to these records. All aspects of the clinical record will be computerised from the notes, investigations, Xrays, images, letters etc, producing a truly complete electronic clinical record. The patient too will have access to his or her own record via "Yourhealth" web pages. This is the single largest IT project to be launched in the UK costing £1.3 billion and will undoubtedly affect the way we all work. The project started this year and contracts for the companies overseeing the project are to be awarded later this year and discussions with clinicians on designing these systems have already started. Many hospital systems still run on old patient administration systems which are in many hospitals coming to the end of their lives and being replaced by more modern solutions which it is hoped will evolve into true EPR as medics view them. Currently most systems are limited to making appointments, logging procedures performed and auditing times of operations as well as financial data, however the newer systems have the capability of doing much more. Our Wyse dumb terminal based system, supplied free with the hospitals PAS system at the Western Eye Hospital, runs a basic EPR using simple screens for data entry which are customisable for speciality and allow the GP/optometrist record to be printed off immediately. As the clinical data is stored it is possible to create reports on activity as well as patients with particular diagnosis etc. It is functional and quick but not as flexible as windows-based EPR schemes.

Central to the EPR is the demographic database of the patients; usually know as the PAS (Patient Administration System). Ideally this data should be able to be shared with other programs, this often needs an interface which can be costly to set up but does ensures data entry is not duplicated and data quality maintained. There is no one program that is everything to everyone, thus bespoke programs have evolved to meet particular needs and thus in ones practice it is necessary to use a range of programs.

Modern alternatives for EPR exist. One we use at the Hillingdon Hospital, and is the largest EPR in private practice, is Practice Manager (DGL - www.dglit.co.uk). This is a modern windows-based program which act as an EPR which has evolved over 12 years and thus is very mature and very extensive. It is also highly flexible being able to adapt to individual needs. At Hillingdon this uses the PAS demographics database to collect the basic information on a patient and with the new PAS will perform a live two-way link.

The front screen of Practice Manager Presents the demographic information on the patient, their GP, and importantly logs the optometrist and other linked clinicians. Currently in hospitals, few write to the patient's Optometrist because they are not recorded. Both our Clinical Data Capture (CDC) and Practice Manager has a database of all our local Optometrists and once this is attached to the record, reports can be copied to them at the same time it goes back to the GP. The biggest complaint Optometrists up and down the country have is that they rarely (12-17% of time in Whittaker et al's survey1) receive information about their patients. There is really no excuse for this as it puts the optometrist in a very difficult situation when the patient returns asking questions. With increasing shared care this is becoming more important. However entries in Practice Manager do not have to be patients but can be companies, company representatives, meetings, friends etc. Letters, articles, papers can be scanned for easy future reference and useful notes section for recording conversations and call log numbers which IT help desks always require you to note down. Practice Manager is a superb front end for Word, which is the word processor it is linked to, making letter writing very easy. All the old correspondence is stored against the patient entry for easy access later.

Practice Manager can be stand alone, but comes into its own in being able to be both networked and has an
import/export facility for laptop users enabling the data to be synchronised with the main server either by connecting to the network or even by modem connection. This helps in outreach clinics or multi-site situations enabling access to the EPR at any time or place. Practice Manager has sections for recording diagnosis in Read 3 format, procedures, management, visual acuity, refraction, investigations, intraocular pressure (IOP) and medication. The diary and theatre modules can be used for not only to book patients but also to schedule meetings and staff holidays. Practice Manager can have any number of different consultant or clinic data sets, so for instance my laptop has a training mode, main NHS clinic, diabetic screening service and a private copy. Every aspect of my professional and person life is managed through Practice Manager and even my son has a copy to manage all his school work!

EPR Entry

Vision may be entered in two formats, Snellen or LogMar, but is displayed in both and may be incorporated into the letter in both formats. By recording or going back in the notes and entering the information on the vision you can build up a picture of what has happened to the patient's vision more quickly next time. The graph is a useful way of displaying this to you and the patient. Similarly there is an intraocular pressure (IOP) section enabling fast evaluation of IOP trends. With combined notes in hospitals it can take quiet some time to look through all the readings when interspersed by general medical notes, where as in an EPR these are all collected together and it is thus far quicker to understand what has been happening to the patients vision or IOP. Having entered the relevant information, the system enables production of request forms for investigations eg. Fundus Fluorescein Angiogram (FFA), Xrays, admission forms etc. The patient's details are merged with Word templates which are completely customisable, my system has over 800. For the FFA request form the program prompts the doctor to enter in which eye the run should be done on, why the FFA is being done and any allergies. This ensures a complete request form every time. In addition the form has the patient information to give the patient. As these are printed with the request they are available every time. Similarly with waiting list forms, the electronic form ensures that all necessary information is entered and not left out, with plenty of information for the patient to take away with them.

Patient Information Sheets

Kessels2 showed that most patients forget up to 80% of what they are told as soon as they leave the clinic. Nearly
half of the information they do remember, they remember incorrectly. It is well know that patients forget 80% of
what you tell them. The article recommends backing up spoken advice with written or visual material.
Written information has the obvious benefit of being able to be read and reviewed later. Practice Manager has a
patient information section enabling unlimited storage of patient information sheets in a variety of font sizes suitable
for the vision of the patient. These can be printed off when they are needed, my view is that every patient should be
given information about their condition to take away. You just cannot keep enough pre-printed leaflets on all the conditions that exist to do this, nor can they be easily updated as new information comes along. A computer and a printer are essential to achieve this.

Medication Screen

The commonest complaint from the pharmacy is that they cannot read the prescription. Modern pharmacy systems
are available for hospital wide systems enabling electronic prescribing from the doctor's terminal, which is passed to
pharmacy electronically and in one place even activates a robot to select the drugs and restock. However few hospitals have succeeded in achieving this. Practice Manager has a medication module that aids the doctor in selecting the drugs by providing advice and then by printing the prescriptions with the name of the doctor so there can be no confusion. This is set to work with the hospital system, FP10's and private prescriptions. This is greatly appreciated by the pharmacists.

Letter creation - Transcription/Voice Dictation

Of vital importance is then to create the final report to send to both the GP and the optometrist as well as any
other linked clinicians there may be. An EPR program like Practice Manager stores and orders these letters for easy retrieval by anyone on the network or even remotely on merged laptops. Computers have encouraged senior staff to perform keyboard typing tasks that were previously the domain of the secretaries. The question of whether this is appropriate use of senior personnel is an interesting one. For those with high level of keyboard skills this is an attractive option as letters and emails are sent with out the need for proof reading in a much shorter time frame.

However if your keyboard typing skills are slow the answer may be voice dictation. The dream of being able to
talk to your computer and it will miraculously obey your commands and type has progressed but is by no means
perfect. It requires significant discipline to use and achieves around 95% accuracy which sounds high, but
means five words in every 100 will be correctly spelt, and thus not picked up by spellcheckers, but just the wrong
words, spotting these is far more difficult unless you have the dictation play as you proof read which is time-consuming. However for the finger typist this is a solution worth trying. Future developments to increase the accuracy are looking at incorporating lip-reading to the speech recognition. Transcription on the other hand has been available for some time, but not integrated with EPR software as of yet. Here you dictate directly onto the PC and the voice files are then sent to your secretary or via email to anywhere in the world for transcription (there are several companies; www.ten-percent.co.uk, www.essentialsecretary.co.uk, www.london-secretarial.co.uk). The human ear has the unique ability to decipher your dictation from background noise, remove the 'ers' and 'ums' and any other irrelevant comments. Given the volumes of letters generated in medicine it is surprising this technology has not been utilised more. In due course the reports will be emailed rather than mailed to the GPs and Optometrists. Though with the availability of encryption for email, the technology to achieve this is here now.

Scanning & Image Storage

Few hospitals have yet taken the final step to discard their paper records despite the technology being cost-effective and available. Virtual CaseNotes (Summit Health) integrates paper-based records with data from other computerised information systems. Paper-based records still provide the mainstay for recording and review of patient information but these can be scanned and stored for later use. The advantage of electronic stored images of notes or data is that it can be available to several users at the same time where as paper records can only be in one place at one time. While computer inputting of data will become more common, the nature of medicine still requires writing of notes at times but these can be scanned and archived later. In time, no doubt, we will see this technology in hospitals. Current software like Practice Manager can scan and store (encrypted) records reducing the need to store paper records. This has huge advantages for your personal or private practice as a filing cabinet of records can be stored on one CD with obvious spacing saving. This can either be done by your own secretary, staff or DGL themselves. Digital photography is becoming the standard for ophthalmic photography in the clinic and for diabetic screening. Radiology is similar progressing towards digital Xrays.

 

NOTE: This article originally appeared in the August/September'03 edition (Vol 10, No.2) of EyeNews and is re-printed with the kind permission of both Mr Lee and EyeNews. The author has no financial interest in any of the products mentioned in this article. The full, un-abridged version of this article can be downloaded here (requires Adobe Acrobat Reader)