Purdue hiring staff to help health-care providers switch to electronic records

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By Jeanne Norberg 
June 14, 2010

Purdue University's Healthcare Technical Assistance Program announced Monday (June 14) that it is hiring 50 professionals to help 2,200 Indiana primary-care doctors adopt electronic records that meet federal standards.

A $12 million American Recovery and Reinvestment Act grant is funding the work through Purdue's Indiana Health Information Technology Extension Center (I-HITEC). Purdue is one of as many as 60 nonprofit organizations nationwide receiving ARRA funding to develop regional centers to assist health professionals in adopting electronic health record technology and ensuring they meet meaningful-use metrics required by the federal government. 

Some of the metrics include improving quality, safety, efficiency, care coordination, public health and health outcomes for groups of individuals, including the distribution of outcomes within groups; reducing health disparities; ensuring adequate privacy; and protecting personal health information.

Purdue's center will aid Indiana small practices of 10 or fewer health-care providers, community health centers, federally qualified health centers and rural health clinics statewide.

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