Tuesday, 8 December 2015

Medical Document Scanning Services To Be HITECH Compliant

By Loris F. Anders


Health care providers have no choice in the matter, they are mandated by law to convert paper medical records to electronic files. The Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act of 2009, also known as HITECH, makes electronic records a requirement. The mandate has caused considerable grief among health care facilities. Thankfully, companies have been formed that provide medical document scanning services to achieve this daunting transition.

Hospitals and other health care facilities have enormous amounts of paper records from years past. The task to convert all these paper documents to electronic files is almost unimaginable. The job goes beyond passing documents through a scanner. People doing this work must have an appreciation of the filing system and how to name and save the electronic files. Unless there is an organized system, files cannot be retrieved.

Paper documents must be arranged systematically to be compatible with the electronic medical records software in current use by the health care facility. Protocols for how to name the electronic files and where to save them for later retrieval must be established. These steps are critical to having retrievable medical records.

The companies that provide these services must be qualified and trusted to securely perform the job. Someone has to take the time to remove staples and paper clips and organize the paper documents before they can be scanned. The patient records may include X rays, which also need to be converted to electronic.

In addition to these challenges, health care providers must be able to prove that the chain of custody of the records during the scanning process has been completely HIPAA compliant. HIPAA is the acronym for Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996. You would not know it from the name or the acronym, but HIPAA is all about keeping patient health care information private.

After the hard copies have been converted to electronic files, the question of how to dispose of the paper documents still remains. Some physicians choose to store the paper documents, but that does present an ongoing expense. If the records are to be disposed of, this too must be in accordance with HIPAA. Secure shredding is another service offered by these companies.

These companies are providing a very necessary services. Hospitals are ill equipped to do this work, and hiring temporary employees is a plan fraught with the probability of errors and mishandling. A staff trained and dedicated to converting paper documents is the best way to approach the requirement for electronic patient records.




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