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General Anesthesia Contributes to Post-op Pain

Some "noxious" general anesthetics excite sensory neurons that cause peripheral pain in patients once they wake from surgery, researchers say. I...

WHO Issues Surgical Safety Checklist

The World Health Organization and the Harvard University School of Public Health have created a new perioperative checklist for surgical team member...

Surgical Business Ethics in the Press

It's no secret that some leading orthopedic surgeons receive six- and seven-figure payments annually from the makers of artificial hips and knees. B...

Home > Archive > December 2006
Business Advisor
Uncovering 12 Hidden Costs of Going Paperless
Melody Mena, RN, RNFA, CNOR

At $213,000, the cost to convert from paper charts to electronic medical records was steep enough. Much of that went to one-time expenses: $120,000 for software and $72,000 for 24 hand-held tablets. The conversion will pay for itself in 5,000 procedures and 12 months, but that doesn't mean we'll be done paying. Here are 12 hidden and recurring expenses of going paperless.

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Categories: Business Management, Cost Management, IT/Tech/Software, Peak Efficiency
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