Healthcare IT Strategy

November 4, 2009

This one’s on my nickle…

Filed under: Rants & Musings — Paul Roemer @ 9:53 pm

bob_neighbors

 

 

 

 

There’s a certain luxury to having a blog.  You’re allowed to opine even if you don’t have much worth pining on—probably should have ended in a proposition instead of a preposition.  Oh well.

A while back I wrote this post–http://healthcareitstrategy.com/2009/09/29/social-media-an-example/. As you can see from the title, I pretended it had something to do about social media and healthcare, just to get you to read it.  Actually, the whole purpose for the blog was to rant about my neighbors.  I’ll pause a moment to allow some of you to catch up to the rest of us.

They have become my personal Stasi, our neighborhood brown shirts.  Since the writing of the prior post, one of our dogs died.  My wife is on our neighborhood board, as is our other neighbor.  What makes this doubly delicious is that the brown shirts seem to miss the silliness of complaining to the board about a member of the board.  Perhaps they think my wife takes off her bad neighbor hat and puts on her board member hat to more properly disperse judgment against herself.

So, the board gets another letter from Brown Shirt stating that a member of the community—us—is in violation of some noise clause in the homeowner’s agreement.  I read the letter.  Technically, we are not violating anything.  Our dog is the one making the noise.  I suggested the board send a letter instructing them to correct their syntax.  The suggestion carried no weight with my wife.

Sorry this has nothing to do with much of anything other than writing it probably prevented me from going to the SPCA to get a really, really loud dog.

saint

EHR meeting etiquette and survival guide

cricket

 

 

 

 

How many times have you been involved in one of those EHR committee meetings whose purported purpose was to elicit ideas?  I find it to be a helpful barometer to scout the room and see if the person who offered an idea at last month’s meeting was invited to this month’s meeting.   To survive across months of meetings requires a lemmingesque ability to walk in silence to the edge of the cliff.

Don’t be fooled into offering an idea simply because the leader is doing that tricky thing about using silence to see who will get so uncomfortable that they just need to hear a voice–their own.  Mistakenly, you believe that someone is actually interested in what you have to say, and you toss your idea into the black hole that used to be your career. Your idea is met with silence, the kind of silence you hear on a warm summer night. You swear you can discern the chirping of individual crickets outside.

Those voices you’ll been talking about in counseling are trying to warn you.  But to no avail, out it comes; “How come we’re not doing those work flow things they talked about?”  ”Why did Our Lady of Perpetual EHR Hospital use and RFP to select their EHR vendor?”  ”Why is radiology bulding their own EHR?”  ”How come nobody is worried about whether this system will allow the referral docs to connect?”

You notice that your brother-in-law, the CMIO, has moved his chair away from yours.  Your best friend’s eyes are locked on his Blackberry.  It’s only then you learn that you and your colleagues aren’t petting the same dog. I think EHR implementations are a lot like that. There’s a lot of talk about doing something new, but more often than not it’s just talk.

sainttop5

Theme: Rubric. Blog at WordPress.com.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 34 other followers