Wal-Mart Inc announced on Wednesday it is partnering with
computer giant Dell Inc. and software maker eClinicalWorks to launch a bundled electronic
health records package for doctors, including installation and maintenance.
The system will be offered through Sam's Club, Wal-Mart's
wholesale branch, which has “a long history of serving small business and over
200,000 medical professionals who are members,” spokeswoman Susan Koehler said.
“Because of our volume, our size and our relationships we
can leverage what we do for our members every day into this service,” said
spokesperson Susan Koehler, in a telephone interview from the company's
Bentonville, Ark., headquarters.
The Wal-Mart initiative would cost less than $25,000 for the
first doctor, and about $10,000each for additional physicians in a medical
practice, according to several published reports. Less than 20 percent of the
US physicians use electronic medical records, many of them complaining about
the upfront costs of going digital and the daunting technological hurdles for
small business.
Under the terms of the deal, Dell will provide computers and
other hardware while eClinicalWorks will provide and install the software.
Wall-Mart will be the coordinator of the whole process.
“We feel a great need. We feel the timing is right given our
country's goals for health care reform. This will enable small town physicians
to have greater access to health information technology,” said Koehler.
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