Guest guest Posted September 4, 2006 Report Share Posted September 4, 2006 a, it works very well to take a template created in Word and put it into the Alteer template list, since Alteer EMR is Word-based. That way it is not necessary to work back and forth between Word and Alteer when you are seeing patients. First, in Alteer go into Clinical Admin, Encounter Templates, and create a new template. Name it anything you want that is easy to remember. I named mine " aaa female complete, " " aaa male complete, " and " az. " I made the female one applicable only to females, and the male only to males, and the az to both, so all I have to type in on the template line of the encounter note is aaa or az and it pops right in. Once you have the labels established, for each template copy the whole thing in Word (CTRL A, CTRL C) and go back into Alteer and paste it in as the template (CTRL V) under the correct label. Or of course you can do it the other way, copy it, paste it in as a new template, and then label it. I hope this helps. > > Terry, > My husband Rian has had Alteer since July of 03 and I am his office manager. > It's great, as you say, for the business end of the practice. I also do all our billing and it is easy. However, Rian, as others, is really frustrated with the EMR portion - he falls terribly behind on documentation (he tends to write very detailed notes) - he doesn't like the templates so he uses a combination of free typing and an older version of Dragon (medical). Because I need to know the charges, he codes and does that portion after reviewing his hand- written notes so I can get the claims out but his unfinished charts " stack up " , so to speak. > > First thing we'll do is upgrade to the Dragon 8 version. However, we are both hopelessly ignorant when it comes to using Word templates and the technical end of EMRs, etc. After you use your own Word template, are you printing it out from Word and scanning it into the chart or can you open a Word template right inside of an Alteer encounter note? > > Thanks so much for the attachments. > a Mintek > office manager > Allegan, MI > > PS If anyone has Alteer billing questions, I think I finally fully understand the system and I'd be glad to help someone else > > Re: Information Technology in health care > > > > Dennis, I too have been working in Alteer since April 2003! Like most office management systems, it seems more dedicated to the business side than the clinical side, but I have been able to create workarounds that are satisfactory. The medicine list needs an archiving function, I believe. And the problem list needs to be sortable for faxing and printing (when sending info to consultants), not just on-screen. > > Anyway . . . I have the same problem with taking too much time for documentation. I do as much of it as possible in the room with the patient or right after the visit. I have a laptop on a cart that I can position so as not to create a barrier. But still I am way behind on completing visits so I can bill them. > > Being in Family Medicine, and seeing a wide variety of patient ages and problems, I ended up not using any of the Alteer templates, which I re! gard as much too wordy and not clinically sound and efficient. > > I have two templates in Word, one for ordinary visits, and one (actually two - one for each gender) for complete exams. I developed the complete exam templates in the olden days when I was dictating and my paper matched the template in the dictation tank. I have the complete exam templates printed out for visits so I can make quick handwritten notes while I am with the patient - sometimes that is needed rather than industriously typing while interacting. I'll attach them here - these may not be my most up-to-date version but close enough. I document a lot by exception, putting a comma after the boilerplate and typing in what is different. Other times I delete and add as appropriate for the specific visit. The templates help me quickly determine the CPT code also. > > I'm sending this to you direct, as well as here, because attachments don't always come through in this system. If anyone else wants an attachment and can't get to it, email me direct. > > Do you have any templates to share? > > Terry Merrifield, Andover KS > > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------- > > > No virus found in this incoming message. > Checked by AVG Free Edition. > Version: 7.1.405 / Virus Database: 268.11.7/434 - Release Date: 08/30/2006 > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 4, 2006 Report Share Posted September 4, 2006 Wes, thanks for sharing your experience. I have little enough computer expertise that I needed, and still need, a combined system where I don't have to worry about the interface issue. Maybe some one of these years I'll know enough to put the best of both together, or some enterprising doctor will create a system that does both well . . . Terry Merrifield, Andover KS > > I have seen the same issue on comparing business vs clinical programs > (Practice Management Systems vs EHRs). After looking at many PMSs & EHRs, I > strongly recommend looking at separate vendors rather than trying for a > combined PMS/EHR from the same vendor. (You might still do that, looking > for a more efficient separate EHR to interface with your business program.) > > > > I've found that producing the best of breed of PMSs and of EHRs requires > very different competencies and different vendors. I haven't seen any > combinations of the two from the same vendor that do both functions well, if > either one. The best EHR vendors should be able to tell you which PMS > vendors they have proven interfaces with. Interface standardization seems > to be improving now, but verify this important characteristic before you > buy, and ask for a guarantee. > > > > Also, be sure to enter your new patients and all demographic and scheduling > data into the PMS first, and then import whatever subgroup of data fields > you need (name, gender, birthdate) into your EHR (not in the reverse > direction, to avoid duplicate and possibly conflicting data fields). The > service and diagnostic codes are generated in the EHR and exported to the > PMS. This data flow should be seamless with a good interface, without > having to resort to the lowest common denominator from a common vendor of > both types of programs. > > > > I use the Praxis EHR and I think its awesome, but its vendor wisely doesn't > pretend to be an expert on PMSs, so it includes interfaces with the > following programs (with others pending): > > * PMS: Accumedic, AdvancedMD, Athena Health, Calmed, Compumedic, > Discus Dental, Eclipse by Galatek, EZ Health Care Systems, EZ Office, > G.E./Centricity (Millbrook), Immtrac (Immunization Registry), Lytec, MD > Office, Medbilltech, Medent, Medical Manager, Medics Elite, Medisoft, > Medware, Micro MD, MOMS-AT, On Staff, PCN, PDS, Perfect Care, PPM, Practice > Plus, Raintree, SoftAid, Ultramed, VitalWorks, Yorkmed > * Lab Systems: Dynacare Laboratories, Dianon (Labcorp), Labcorp, > Labtrak, Meditech, Quest, Schuylab, Sunquist, Westcliff > * Patient Demographics: Paradigm Consulting Inc, X-Link > * Pharmacy Systems: Allscripts, Omnicare > * EKG, Spirometry, Holter Monitoring: Brentwood by Midmark, Cardio > Control NV (Welch Allyn), Cardio Card ECG > * Patient Medical History: Instant Medical History > > Wes Bradford > Rancho Palos Verdes, CA > > _____ > > > > > From: > [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Terry Stryker > Merrifield, MD > Sent: Thursday, August 31, 2006 6:10 PM > To: > Subject: Re: Information Technology in health care > > > Dennis, I too have been working in Alteer since April 2003! Like most > office management systems, it seems more dedicated to the business side than > the clinical side, but I have been able to create workarounds that are > satisfactory. The medicine list needs an archiving function, I believe. > And the problem list needs to be sortable for faxing and printing (when > sending info to consultants), not just on-screen. > > Anyway . . . I have the same problem with taking too much time for > documentation. I do as much of it as possible in the room with the patient > or right after the visit. I have a laptop on a cart that I can position so > as not to create a barrier. But still I am way behind on completing visits > so I can bill them. > > Being in Family Medicine, and seeing a wide variety of patient ages and > problems, I ended up not using any of the Alteer templates, which I regard > as much too wordy and not clinically sound and efficient. > > I have two templates in Word, one for ordinary visits, and one (actually two > - one for each gender) for complete exams. I developed the complete exam > templates in the olden days when I was dictating and my paper matched the > template in the dictation tank. I have the complete exam templates printed > out for visits so I can make quick handwritten notes while I am with the > patient - sometimes that is needed rather than industriously typing while > interacting. I'll attach them here - these may not be my most up- to-date > version but close enough. I document a lot by exception, putting a comma > after the boilerplate and typing in what is different. Other times I delete > and add as appropriate for the specific visit. The templates help me > quickly determine the CPT code also. > > I'm sending this to you direct, as well as here, because attachments don't > always come through in this system. If anyone else wants an attachment and > can't get to it, email me direct. > > Do you have any templates to share? > > Terry Merrifield, Andover KS > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 5, 2006 Report Share Posted September 5, 2006 Gordon, I am one who has been slowly transforming over the past few months my solo paper practice since 2002 into an IT practice in order to try to be more efficient and financially viable. I currently still refer to my paper charts and Amazing Charts simultaneously and haven't quite made the complete transition yet. Janice Pegels Information Technology in health care Hi folksMost IMPs bailed from typical practices and started fresh with IT (Information Technology) from the start.I'm curious if anyone out there started by redesigning the work and then went in search of IT to support new work processes?Gordon Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 5, 2006 Report Share Posted September 5, 2006 Gordon, I am one who has been slowly transforming over the past few months my solo paper practice since 2002 into an IT practice in order to try to be more efficient and financially viable. I currently still refer to my paper charts and Amazing Charts simultaneously and haven't quite made the complete transition yet. Janice Pegels Information Technology in health care Hi folksMost IMPs bailed from typical practices and started fresh with IT (Information Technology) from the start.I'm curious if anyone out there started by redesigning the work and then went in search of IT to support new work processes?Gordon Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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