What was your first car? Mine was a 60’ something Corvair–$300. Four doors, black vinyl bench seating that required hours of hand-stitching to hide the slash marks made by the prior owner, an AM radio, push-button transmission located on the dash. Maroon-ish. Fifty miles to the—quart—I carried a case of oil in the trunk.
I am far from mechanically inclined. In high school I failed the ASVAB, Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery—the put the round peg in the round hole test. Just to understand how un-complex the Corvair was, I, who hardly knows how to work the radio in a new car, rebuilt the Corvair’s alternator—must not have had many working parts. I could see the street from the driver’s side foot well.
However, it had one thing going for it, turning the key often made it go—at least for the first three or four months during which I owned it. Serves me right. A guy in school who I didn’t know who was selling it pitched it to me as his dream car. Not wanting to look stupid, I bought into the sales pitch. Pretty poor due diligence. An impulse purchase to meet what I felt was a social imperative—a date-mobile.
The last time I made a good impulse purchase was an ice cream sandwich on a hundred degree day. Most other decisions could have used some good data. The lack of good data falls on one person, me.
How good is the data you have for deciding to implement and EHR? In selecting an EHR? Did you perform the necessary due diligence? How do you know? It’s tedious, it can lack intellectual stimulation? You want to be seen as someone who made a wise choice.
The difference between you and me is that when I learned I’d made a poor decision I bought a different car. You can’t do that with an EHR. You’re stuck looking at the street through the hole in the floor for a long time.
