Notes written about non-Hispanic Black patients had higher odds of containing terms undermining credibility and lower odds of supporting credibility compared with notes about White patients. HealthDay ...
October 1, 2012 — Primary care physicians and patients believe that allowing patients to review doctors' notes has significant benefits and few problems, according to the findings of a ...
More U.S. patients will soon have free, electronic access to the notes their doctors write about them under a new federal requirement for transparency. Many health systems are opening up records ...
Most primary care providers see 15 to 20 patients a day, and many of them spend up to two hours a shift typing information into patient charts. It's a leading reason for physician burnout, said Dr.
Clinician documentation undermining patient credibility may disproportionately undermine Black individuals. (HealthDay News) — An analysis of more than 13 million electronic health record (EHR) notes ...
The researchers found that clinician notes about Hispanic/Latino and non-Hispanic Black patients had similarly higher odds of containing terms undermining credibility and lower odds of supporting ...
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