Medical documentation arose as individual case reports written for teaching purposes. Documentation for patient care later occurred in physicians' personal daybooks and only evolved into the individual patient record in… Click to show full abstract
Medical documentation arose as individual case reports written for teaching purposes. Documentation for patient care later occurred in physicians' personal daybooks and only evolved into the individual patient record in the early 20th century. Dr. Lawrence Weed improved the utility of the patient record by introducing a problem-oriented/subject-object-assessment-plan structure and he and other innovators transformed the patient record into electronic form. Pediatricians built on these innovations to create a child health electronic health record (EHR) for primary care. An American Academy of Pediatrics task force formally specified the child-specific needs of the EHR, but much work remains to integrate the EHR into the pediatric primary care of the future.
               
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