The Queensland branch of the Australian Medical Association condemns the rollout of electronic health records in hospitals, saying critical patient care is being compromised.
The state's peak medical body has slammed the rollout of one of Queensland Health's most expensive IT upgrades, saying patient safety is being put at risk.Patient data has gone missing and patient drug dosage has been compromised, the AMAQ saysQueensland Health says it is confident patient care is not being compromised
In a letter obtained by ABC News, the Australian Medical Association of Queensland has warned the state's hospital and health services to urgently halt the Integrated Electronic Medical Record upgrade so issues can be fixed. It warned system lags have led to patients mistakenly being given multiple doses of drugs and critical patient data like heart rate, blood pressure and oxygen levels not being recorded during operations.
The $600 million ieMR rollout involves moving paper-based clinical charts onto digital platforms and automatically recording vital patient signs in real time.The AMAQ also warned patient data had gone missing from the appointment platform and that there was a limited ability to investigate the loss of other information from programs, including SurgiNet and PowerChart .
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