Liaw S T, Schattner P
University of Melbourne, Shepparton, Victoria.
Aust Fam Physician. 2003 Nov;32(11):941-4.
The uptake of computers in Australian general practice has been for administrative use and prescribing, but the development of electronic decision support (EDS) has been particularly slow. Therefore, computers are not being used to their full potential in assisting general practitioners to care for their patients.
This article examines current barriers to EDS in general practice and possible strategies to increase its uptake.
Barriers to the uptake of EDS include a lack of a business case, shifting of costs for data collection and management to the clinician, uncertainty about the optimal level of decision support, lack of technical and semantic standards, and resistance to EDS use by the time conscious GP. There is a need for a more strategic and attractive incentives program, greater national coordination, and more effective collaboration between government, the computer industry and the medical profession if current inertia is to be overcome.