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October 2002
FSU’S CLINICAL LEARNING CENTER PIONEERS THE USE OF ELECTRONIC
MEDICAL RECORDS
TALLAHASSEE, Fla., --The Clinical Learning Center at the Florida
State University College of Medicine is pioneering the use of
electronic medical records in the training of medical students in a
simulated clinical setting.
College of Medicine Dean Joseph Scherger said that the electronic
medical record system is a key part of a much larger commitment the
college has made to integrating medical information technology into
the curriculum at FSU.
“Information technology is a major emphasis of the medical education
program at FSU, not simply because it increases doctors’ efficiency,
but because it can help prevent medical errors and improve the
quality of patient care,” Scherger said.
A June 10 special report in the Wall Street Journal titled “Health
Care Goes Digital” leads off with the statement that “The
health-care industry finally has little choice: It has to get
wired.”
“A number of factors, including mounting evidence that information
technology helps hospitals save lives, have come together to make
hanging back no longer an option for doctors and hospitals,” wrote
Wall Street Journal assistant managing editor Laura Landro.
While about 80 percent of medical schools nationwide train students
in simulated clinics where actors portray patients, the Clinical
Learning Center at FSU is the first to deploy a system that enables
students to enter and retrieve patient information using an
electronic medical record system.
The system, called Practice Partner, is a product of Physician Micro
Systems Inc., a leading medical software company based in Seattle.
“We are teaching students from day one how to practice medicine
using the best information technology available,” said Nancy Clark,
director of medical informatics education at FSU. “This includes not
only electronic medical records, but also handheld and laptop
computers and the use of Internet-based and other electronic
resources in clinical decision-making.”
Along with medical information technology, the Clinical Learning
Center focuses on teaching patient communication skills, or what
some people call “bedside manner,” said Sarah Sherraden, the
center’s director.
“The overriding goal of all the courses that use the Clinical
Learning Center is to instill not only the science, but also the art
of medicine in our students,” Sherraden said. “By teaching students
in a controlled environment and recording their patient encounters
on digital video, we can give them important feedback on how to talk
to a patient and develop a partnership with the patient that is
focused on the patient’s overall well-being.”
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