Electronic Health Records & the Data of Health Care [Infographic]

“In the next 10 years, data science and software will do more for medicine than all of the biological sciences together,” said venture capitalist Vinod Khosla. Data science holds great promise for patient health, but patient data is only actionable in so far as it is digital. This is where Electronic Health Records (EHRs) come in. By 2019, the majority of physicians will have adopted a basic EHR system, and with good reason, too. EHRs may reduce outpatient care costs by 3 percent.

Going in for dialysis? It’s a good bet that your information will be collected and stored digitally, as 80.6 percent of dialysis practices have adopted EHRs. If you have a wellness check-up scheduled, be prepared to fill out some paperwork — only 35.9 percent of general preventative medicine practices have adopted EHRs.

This “Electronic Health Records & the Data of Health Care” infographic from datascience@berkeley explores the health data revolution, the difference between Electronic Medical Records and EHRs, which states and practices adopted electronic systems, and what the future of the digital health industry looks like. Get ready for the next wave of medical innovation.

Read the text-only version

Brought to you by datascience@berkeley: Masters of Data Science