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The Veterans Administration uses electronic medical records to improve care and cut costs. Joining The Takeaway to discuss this system is Phillip Longman, author and New America Foundation fellow, and Peter Ubel, physician and behavioral scientist.
As the Obama administration and Congress design a blueprint for our next healthcare system, The Takeaway is looking at possible models that are already in place. President Obama often refers to electronic medical records as one way to improve care while cutting costs. That’s something the Veterans Administration is already doing. Since the 1970s, the V.A. has digitized its system to coordinate medical care, which now serves more than 5 million veterans. Joining us to talk about what lawmakers can draw from the V.A. is Phillip Longman. He is a Schwartz Senior Fellow at the New America Foundation and author of Best Care Anywhere: Why VA Health Care is Better Than Yours . He also has an article on Health IT coming out in the July issue of The Washington Monthly. For a practitioner’s perspective we are joined by Peter Ubel. He is a physician and behavioral scientist at the University of Michigan. He has practiced medicine in the VA system for 15 years.
For a different view of the Veteran’s Administration’s practices, read Walt Bogdanich’s article, At V.A. Hospital, a Rogue Cancer Unit, in The New York Times.