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Dallas Hospital Alters Account, Raising Questions on Ebola Case
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NEW YORK TIMES Oct. 3, 2014
DALLAS TEX.
On Thursday, the hospital, Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas, released a statement essentially blaming a flaw in its electronic health records system for its decision to send the patient — Thomas E. Duncan, a Liberian national visiting his girlfriend and relatives in the United States — home the first time he visited its emergency room, Sept. 25. It said there were separate “workflows” for doctors and nurses in the records so the doctors did not receive the information that he had come from Africa.
But on Friday evening, the hospital effectively retracted that portion of its statement, saying that “there was no flaw” in its electronic health records system. The hospital said “the patient’s travel history was documented and available to the full care team in the electronic health record (E.H.R.), including within the physician’s workflow.”
The hospital had said previously that the patient’s condition during his first visit did not warrant admission and that he was not exhibiting symptoms specific to Ebola.
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Did computer raise Ebola spread risk? --Politico
"The medical community’s readiness to accept the hospital’s first account, of a flawed electronic health record, displayed the level of unhappiness with the $30 billion federal program to transform the way America’s medical system records and shares patient information."