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Big HMO Jolted By Email, System Failures

JoanofAlaska writes "The Wall Street Journal is running a front page story about the internal mass e-mail that exposed the failing $4 billion dollar electronic medical record system at Kaiser Permanente, the biggest non-profit HMO in the country. When word of the system's meltdown quickly spread back in November, one reporter obtained a 722 page internal document that showed patient safety lapses as a result of the system's problems. Then in February, the Los Angeles Times had a front page story in which a systems analyst who worked on the project called it 'the worst [technology] project I have seen in my 25 years in the business.' They've created a website to try to rebuild confidence in the project, and they say their goal for system availability is 99.7% (they're currently at 99.2%)."

4 of 171 comments (clear)

  1. Smoke, meet fire... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Here's the first e-mail. Their CEO sent out an e-mail response to all their employees the next day (the same day it looks like the CIO suddenly resigned effective immediately).

    I don't know what to say about the first e-mail until I see more but the CEO sounds like a real jack ass in the second one. And if that 99.2% number is right then they got bigger problems than some email - that's all I can say!

    ac

    1. Re:Smoke, meet fire... by networkBoy · · Score: 4, Informative

      but say you can't get antibiotics for a day to treat an infection due to system downtime That would not happen. As a kaiser member I can tell you three things:
      • The patient owns their care. If you don't keep track of things then you will not get the care you need. (this is not malice, but rather I suspect kaiser is a victim of their size)
      • The doctors and nursing staff want to do their best for the most part, but are overworked, again leading to "you own your own care"
      • even when there is an outage, if an ER doc wants meds for a patient, they can get them. The computer system does all the record keeping, the humans still do the medicine, they have paper forms for everything, and when the computer is being an ass, they simply fill out the form like the "old days"

      In all reality they are not the great evil. They certainly could do better, but by no means are they horrid (this assumes that you, as a patient, know what you need, and press for a second opinion &&|| a specialist when the initial diagnosis doesn't seem quite right).
      -nB
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  2. Long-term Kaiser patient disputes wild claims by msblack · · Score: 4, Informative

    This 45-year old lifetime Kaiser patient believes the media frenzy has blown this out of proportion. Kaiser Permanente undertook the monumental task of converting its patient records system into an electronic information system. Converting the hundreds of paper records for each of millions of patients is truly a monumental task and some problems will occur.

    Let me tell you of my experience visiting my doctor yesterday (Thursday). During my visit, my doctor pulled up recent lab results on the exam room console. He was able to prescribe new medication and schedule follow-up lab test through the system (no paper). I went down the hall to get a tetanus booster, then walk downstairs to pick up my prescription. All with no paperwork. I believe their system is phenomenally successful. I won't dispute the cost of this project.

    I've undergone a number of procedures and consumed considerable medical resources during the past year. All of my records are computerized and information is easily shared among their medical professionals. The doctors, nurses, lab technicians have access to information required to deliver quality medical care to me.

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  3. Re:Epic Systems? No wonder... by Mumpsman · · Score: 4, Informative

    Oh, Epic Systems? No wonder. Dude, you're f****ed.

    *sigh* - too true. Epic requires a monumental effort just to get the off-the-shelf product to work properly. Kaiser is doing a massive amount of internal development in addition to trying to implement as Epics biggest customer.

    Part of me wants to think that Justin is just fresh meat who hasn't put in the time to become as jaded as the rest of us in HIS. The other part of me thinks he might be right and that Kaiser has bitten off way more than it can chew. Failure to understand the effort involved is just as pervasive as the massive waste he's critiquing, and just as harmful.

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