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Saves Examination Time |
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Supports Appropriate Coding |
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English and Spanish |
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No Contract To Sign |
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50-60¢ per use |
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Symptom-specific medical history questionnaire improves practice management. You're a physician with very little free time. Would you be interested in saving 5 minutes with every patient office visit, while gathering better data during the examination? You can do this if you get a Medical Relevance medical history of the patient’s current illness before the patient visit.
Patient interview software has been around for 15 years, and is being used by renowned institutions such as the Mayo Clinic and Henry Ford Medical Systems and in most of the major electronic medical record (EMR) systems. These systems require substantial computer hardware expense, and the interview is usually done when the patient is already in the office. Medical Relevance has developed an Internet model using the same medical software engine they use, but patients can take the questionnaire in the privacy of their home, from any computer, and a concise medical history about the specific illness will be sent securely to you for review prior to the appointment. Best of all, your patients build their own summary history by answering the same medical questions you would ask in the live examination.
When the patient is in for the visit and examination, you could use the well-formatted, typed-written summary to formulate better questions, probe a deeper diagnosis, write notes on the report during the patient interview, and afterwards use the summary as a basis for appropriate insurance coding without having to pay transcription costs. The Medical Relevance patent pending system is simple to use. It doesn't require purchasing any equipment or signing any contracts or significantly changing office workflow. It does save time and money for you, and will empower patients to have better input in their care.
Check out the site, sign up for a demo, and join the community of doctors who use Patient Powered Medical Histories to build a better practice. |
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