Guest guest Posted December 28, 2006 Report Share Posted December 28, 2006 Hi Shirley, I use an excel spreadsheet mainly, along with an ‘alert screen’ that’s on the facesheet of my pts in my EMR. As of Jan 1st, I’m starting to use a handout (adopted from Pamela Wible – thanks) to give to all pts during their non-acute visits to document their med changes, follow up, labs due, CPE due date, etc. I’m also going to send out post card reminders to get the cycle going. A. Eads, M.D. Pinnacle Family Medicine, PLLC phone fax P.O. Box 7275 Woodland Park, CO 80863 From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Shirley PigottMD Sent: Tuesday, December 26, 2006 2:08 AM To: YahooFM Subject: Database to track clinical information; practice progress Many of you have answered this poll. Do you use some form of database to track clinical information to improve patient care and outcomes? For those who have answered 'yes', what resources to you use and how has it affected your practice? Some changes I've made in my practice: I'm down to 1/4 time cleaning person; one insurance clerk who is clinically trained and can do the receptionist work (3/4 time) ; one nurse who can do receptionist work ( full time); a contract IT person and a CPA who does payroll. Down from 6 one year ago. I paid $94,000 in salaries last year; I should be doing a little better than providing jobs for other people this year. I don't do Medicare at all; no new Medicaid. I particularly like to serve people who don't have insurance. I very rarely give pain meds on the first visit - this turns away the bad guys. If I take the history over the phone when the cash patient calls, tell them I only do one problem in one visit; they must have a very focused visit; except for the paper work they are in and out in ten minutes - usually $50. They give me a chief complaint over the phone - if I can't handle it in 10 minutes, I tell them so. Shirley Pigott MD Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 28, 2006 Report Share Posted December 28, 2006 , Would you mind sharing a little more about how you use the Excel spreadsheet to track clinical data? Hope you are surviving the snow! I think about you when I hear the news..... Thanks, Sharon At 07:21 AM 12/28/2006, you wrote: Hi Shirley, I use an excel spreadsheet mainly, along with an ‘alert screen’ that’s on the facesheet of my pts in my EMR. As of Jan 1st, I’m starting to use a handout (adopted from Pamela Wible – thanks) to give to all pts during their non-acute visits to document their med changes, follow up, labs due, CPE due date, etc. I’m also going to send out post card reminders to get the cycle going. A. Eads, M.D. Pinnacle Family Medicine, PLLC phone fax P.O. Box 7275 Woodland Park, CO 80863 From: [ mailto: ] On Behalf Of Shirley PigottMD Sent: Tuesday, December 26, 2006 2:08 AM To: YahooFM Subject: Database to track clinical information; practice progress Many of you have answered this poll. Do you use some form of database to track clinical information to improve patient care and outcomes? For those who have answered 'yes', what resources to you use and how has it affected your practice? Some changes I've made in my practice: I'm down to 1/4 time cleaning person; one insurance clerk who is clinically trained and can do the receptionist work (3/4 time) ; one nurse who can do receptionist work ( full time); a contract IT person and a CPA who does payroll. Down from 6 one year ago. I paid $94,000 in salaries last year; I should be doing a little better than providing jobs for other people this year. I don't do Medicare at all; no new Medicaid. I particularly like to serve people who don't have insurance. I very rarely give pain meds on the first visit - this turns away the bad guys. If I take the history over the phone when the cash patient calls, tell them I only do one problem in one visit; they must have a very focused visit; except for the paper work they are in and out in ten minutes - usually $50. They give me a chief complaint over the phone - if I can't handle it in 10 minutes, I tell them so. Shirley Pigott MD No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG Free Edition. Version: 7.0.409 / Virus Database: 268.15.28/605 - Release Date: 12/27/2006 Sharon McCoy , M.D. Renaissance Family Medicine The Rebirth of Personal Healthcare www.SharonMD.com Phone Fax (949) 281-2197 No virus found in this outgoing message. Checked by AVG Free Edition. Version: 7.0.409 / Virus Database: 268.15.29/607 - Release Date: 12/28/2006 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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