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#Prescription Writing Software
marketinsight1234 · 7 months
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Prescription Writing Software Market: Global Industry Analysis and Forecast 2023 – 2030
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Prescription Writing Software Market Size Was Valued at USD 4.09 Billion in 2022, and is Projected to Reach USD 7.38 Billion by 2030, Growing at a CAGR of 7.65% From 2023-2030.
The Prescription Writing Software Market has seen substantial growth in recent years, driven by the increasing adoption of electronic health records (EHRs) and the need for efficient prescription management systems. These software solutions streamline the process of generating and managing prescriptions, reducing errors, enhancing patient safety, and improving overall healthcare outcomes. Moreover, the proliferation of telemedicine and digital healthcare platforms has further fueled the demand for prescription writing software, enabling healthcare professionals to prescribe medications remotely and facilitate better patient care.
Prescription writing software typically includes features that allow healthcare providers to enter patient information, choose medications, specify dosages and instructions, and electronically send the prescription to pharmacies. The software may also include functionality for checking drug interactions, allergies, and other safety considerations, helping healthcare professionals make informed decisions about the prescribed medications.
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Moreover, the report includes significant chapters such as Patent Analysis, Regulatory Framework, Technology Roadmap, BCG Matrix, Heat Map Analysis, Price Trend Analysis, and Investment Analysis which help to understand the market direction and movement in the current and upcoming years. 
Leading players involved in the Prescription Writing Software Market include:
Epic Systems Corporation (US), eClinicalWorks (US), athenahealth (US), Allscripts Healthcare LLC (US), Cerner Corporation (US), GoodWill International (US), MEDICAL Information Technology Inc. (US), CPSI (US), Meta (US), Elinext (US), EPIC Systems Corporation (US), INFOR (US), Cognizant (US), Oracle (US), Jag products LLC (US), Optum Inc. (US), Change Healthcare (US), SAP (Germany), Koninklijke Philips N.V. (Netherlands), Kaaspro (India), Duchang IT (China) 
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Segmentation of Prescription Writing Software Market:
By Type
Cloud-based
On-premise
By Functionality
Clinical Documentation
Patient Management
Reporting & Analytics
By Practice Size
Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (SMEs)
Large Enterprise
By End-User
Hospitals
Clinics
Research Centres
Market Segment by Regions: -
North America (US, Canada, Mexico)
Eastern Europe (Bulgaria, The Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Rest of Eastern Europe)
Western Europe (Germany, UK, France, Netherlands, Italy, Russia, Spain, Rest of Western Europe)
Asia Pacific (China, India, Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam, The Philippines, Australia, New Zealand, Rest of APAC)
Middle East & Africa (Turkey, Bahrain, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, UAE, Israel, South Africa)
South America (Brazil, Argentina, Rest of SA)
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(5) Readers are provided with findings and conclusion of the research study provided in the Prescription Writing Software Market report.
Our study encompasses major growth determinants and drivers, along with extensive segmentation areas. Through in-depth analysis of supply and sales channels, including upstream and downstream fundamentals, we present a complete market ecosystem.
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#i think i might be having a nervous breakdown#i dont think there will ever be a good time to have one but this week is a very bad week for me to have one#so uh idk what im doing tbh#im not going to school tomorrow#friday? who knows#i havent been in all week#it started with me being sick and now im still sick but also feeling like complete and utter shit#i havent done half the things im supposed to do#and it should be fine in that regard because my mum told me shell email people for me to ask for extensions#but theres one thing due next week which is an official deadline which cannot be moved#and its piece of work that i can only to in school because i dont have the technology or software at home#technically im not allowed to do it at home but thats besides the point#I’m actually terrified of that deadline rn its making me feel physically sick#ive been writing a second chapter for pull on my strings recently#and thats literally the only thing thats holding me together#being able to do that and enjoy it although progress is slow is all i have rn tbh#so i dont think im gonna meet all the fic deadlines i set for myself which im totally fine with its just one of those things#ive gone to bed but i havent taken any of the medication i was supposed to#its been five days and i still dont have my prescription#(i was only first prescribed it last week so im not being affected by that its just annoying because i guess that could help me)#i havent started useing the cream the doctor gave me yet but it has only been a week#so yeah im really stressed out about everything#i didnt shower today and i barely ate anything proper until dinner#i did eat but it wasnt anything that substantial#i just feel like my life is falling apart a bit#i think i have therapy next week but im not sure#i hope i do#yall dont have to worry too much about me i guess screaming into the void helps and i like being honest with people about where im at#louie says shit#tw vent
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maaarine · 4 months
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Getting past ‘it’s IBS’ (Xi Chen, Aeon, June 04 2024)
"In the late 1980s, aged 12, Taryn was taken to her doctor’s office with cramping, bloating, and constipation after eating, and was told that she had ‘a nervous stomach’.
As a white girl growing up in New Jersey, she met a stereotype, and when initial bloodwork and imaging was negative for evidence of a ‘real’, or organic disease in her gut, one of Taryn’s doctors began writing in her charts that she had irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), a misdiagnosis that would follow Taryn for life.
At the time, IBS was considered by many to be a medically unexplained and therefore controversial illness, keeping company with conditions such as fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue syndrome.
As a result, it carried the stigma of being a psychosomatic illness, caused primarily by stress and anxiety, and Taryn was sent home with prescriptions for diet and exercise. (…)
Today, unlike in the 1990s, it is well established that conditions like IBS, collectively known as disorders of gut-brain interaction (DGBIs), are real diseases that disrupt the communication between the nervous system of the brain and spine, and the nervous system of the intestines.
First mentioned in the book The Irritable Gut (1979) by the gastroenterologist W Grant Thompson, the conditions were labelled ‘functional’ disorders – characterised not by structural damage to the hardware of the gut, but by a glitch in its ‘software’, in other words, its nervous system, charged with processing, receiving or relaying information coming in or going out.
Software is not as easily observed as hardware, however, and much of academic medicine views the mind and the body as two separate and distinct entities, a viewpoint called mind-body dualism.
Over time, and despite the more nuanced meaning intended by Thompson, the term ‘functional’ became associated exclusively with disorders of the mind.
This is part of the reason why there is still stigma against conditions like IBS, and why attempts to establish diagnostic criteria for IBS in particular suffered from vagueness. (…)
When academics read that IBS patients have higher rates of anxiety and depression, or that antidepressants are a treatment for IBS, many assume that this is because psychiatric symptoms cause symptoms of IBS without considering the inverse, that chronic undiagnosed abdominal pain predisposes patients to having mood disorders.
The real reason these drugs are effective, however, is that, in utero, the precursor cells for our gut and our brain actually share the same nervous system, and only later separate in embryonic development.
As a result, the two nervous systems utilise the same neurotransmitters, such as serotonin, to send messages between neurons.
This is why we sometimes feel butterflies in our stomach when we’re nervous, and why stress and anxiety often worsen symptoms of IBS, but do not necessarily cause it.
As Brown’s quote above implies, the stereotype of the anxious patient in pain applies not only to IBS but all patients who present to clinics with vague abdominal distress (including those with non-gastrointestinal conditions like endometriosis, who experience delayed diagnosis because providers take women’s pain less seriously than men’s).
A classic example is peptic ulcer disease, a cause of severe abdominal pain that for decades was denounced as a psychosomatic illness until Barry Marshall and Robin Warren discovered in 1983 that it was caused by a species of bacteria.
Before their findings, peptic ulcers were managed with diet and, frequently, surgery, when what patients needed were antibiotics. (…)
In my opinion, the root of the problem is medical education itself.
Unless a medical trainee becomes a gastroenterologist, it is unlikely that they will receive any specialised education in IBS, let alone the history of IBS research proving it to be an organic condition, despite 40 per cent of the general population having functional gastrointestinal disorders.
Partly, this is because a majority of medical education in countries including the US, the UK and Canada takes place in academic centres associated with hospitals, where medical students will probably never encounter a patient for whom their IBS symptoms are the primary reason for them appearing in the emergency room, and especially not for their admission to the hospital itself.
As a consequence, medical students also don’t get their knowledge of IBS tested by board examinations.
This speaks to the fact that, echoing Osler, IBS generally doesn’t kill patients, and our current healthcare system values measures of mortality and cure in response to acute complaints more than quality of life and the management of suffering from chronic issues such as IBS.
The same could be said about long COVID (which, to this day, is sometimes challenged as illegitimate) and chronic fatigue syndrome, where sufferers are often sent off to a psychiatrist for care.
The thinking is that these ongoing problems, where there is no mainstream route for testing and treatment, are not as important for medical students to know about compared with, say, a patient crashing after a cardiac arrest, even though most of the global disease burden across the developed and the developing world is caused by chronic, not acute, illness. (…)
These demographic patterns don’t explain who really has the disease – they just reveal medical and social bias and entrenched stereotypes: women are perceived as hysterical and diagnosis-seeking, while men are stoic and avoidant, for instance; or white women are thought to tolerate less pain than people of colour.
None of this, in reality, is true – but it is part of the reason why so many patients assume that what they suffer from won’t be justified by the presence of organic disease and therefore doesn’t warrant a doctor’s visit in the first place.
Such patients, treated so poorly within the medical mainstream, now have a community and identity of their own in the Wild West of alternative medicine that flourishes online.
Such groups, seeking to empower themselves and especially hoping to get well, today stand at loggerheads with the practices and physicians they have left behind.
Some accuse their former doctors of gaslighting them, and they deserve to be heard.
Much of what I have discussed regarding misdiagnoses of IBS assumes that healthcare providers, even when in error, always have good intentions and are sincere about using the diagnosis to clarify the patient’s medical case.
There were several elements of Taryn’s story, however, and in my own experiences of how DGBIs are taught in medical school, that make it difficult for me to believe that this assumption holds in most doctor visits.
Although one could argue that the blasé diagnoses of IBS and disordered eating for Taryn could be down to simple carelessness and negligence, honest errors, or someone being ‘just a bad doctor’, it’s obvious to me that a pattern was developing with Taryn’s interactions with different providers who weren’t taking her lived experience itself seriously, just as I had stopped taking my own experiences seriously.
What holds our stories together, I believe, is this phenomenon where both of our perceptions of our own ability to know what’s true or not were put into question."
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orangepanic · 2 months
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19, 24, and 41 for the writer asks 👾
19. What's the most-used tag on your AO3?
Alternate Universe - Canon Divergence, followed by Non-Canon Relationship and Not Canon Compliant. Not shocking for someone who's life's work is rewriting canon for a non-canon ship.
24. Worst writing advice anyone ever gave you?
Pretty much anything prescriptive about process: write a complete first draft before editing; make an outline; plot out the major story beats; use a planner; only write in two hour chunks; write longhand for focus; use this or that software; etc etc etc. For fuck's sake I'm not building a car and this is not an assembly line. If I wanna sit on my deck in nothing but my socks, chug whiskey straight from the bottle, and write backwards from the ending while wearing my cat on my head like the world's fattest, angriest hat, that's just as valid as anything else as long as I'm writing. I'm a big believer in finding whatever process works for you and embracing that brains - especially creative brains - get unlocked in different ways.
41. Do you tend to re-read fics or are you a one-and-done kind of person?
I'm a little of both. I re-read my own fics all the time because I am the audience, but I don't re-read other fics nearly so often. I'm not opposed to it though. I'm also a great re-reader of books. But I save this for a few favorites, book and fic both.
Get to know your fanfic writer ask
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myconetted · 5 months
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the medtech industry, afaict, has not solved this problem:
Data from customer 1 is entered into system A owned by FooCorp, their. FooCorp contracts with BarCorp in order to fulfill prescriptions. BarCorp uses System B, developed by outsourced software company BazCorp, for managing consumer health data. This health data falls under HIPAA regulation so customer 1 has to—
actually even trying to write out the problem statement alone is exhausting, post cancelled. i just want my fuckening healthcare
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fishboneart · 6 months
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Fishbone #010
the human cost rolls downhill
5 source images, 9 layers.
I hate having to write this. I hate that this is a thing that happened to be written about.
In early 2024 a private virtual clinic providing medical care for a vulnerable and underserved patient demographic allegedly replaced 80% of its human staff with machine learning software.
As far as I can find this hasn't been reported on in the media so far and many of the details are currently not public record. I can't confirm how many staff were laid off, how many quit, how many remain, and how many of those are medics vs how many are admin. I can't confirm exact dates or software applications. This uncertainty about key details is why I'm not naming the clinic. I don't want to accidentally do a libel.
I'm not a journalist and ancestors willing researching this post is as close as I'll ever have to get. It's been extremely depressing. The patient testimonials are abundant and harrowing.
What I have been able to confirm is that the clinic has publicly announced they are "embracing AI," and their FAQs state that their "algorithms" assess patients' medical history, create personalised treatment plans, and make recommendations for therapies, tests, and medications. This made me scream out loud in horror.
Exploring the clinic's family of sites I found that they're using Zoho to manage appointment scheduling. I don't know what if any other applications they're using Zoho for, or whether they're using other software alongside it. Zoho provides office, collaboration, and customer relationship management products; things like scheduling, videocalls, document sharing, mail sorting, etc.
The clinic's recent Glassdoor reviews are appalling, and make reference to increased automation, layoffs, and hasty ai implementation.
The patient community have been reporting abnormally high rates of inadequate and inappropriate care since late February/early March, including:
Wrong or incomplete prescriptions
Inability to contact the clinic
Inability to cancel recurring payments
Appointments being cancelled
Staff simply failing to attend appointments
Delayed prescriptions
Wrong or incomplete treatment summaries
Unannounced dosage or medication changes
The clinic's FAQ suggests that this is a temporary disruption while the new automation workflows are implemented, and service should stabilise in a few months as the new workflows come online. Frankly I consider this an unacceptable attitude towards human lives and health. Existing stable workflows should not be abandoned until new ones are fully operational and stable. Ensuring consistent and appropriate care should be the highest priority at all times.
The push to introduce general-use machine learning into specialised areas of medicine is a deadly one. There are a small number of experimental machine learning models that may eventually have limited use in highly specific medical contexts, to my knowledge none are currently commercially available. No commercially available current generation general use machine learning model is suitable or safe for medical use, and it's almost certain none ever will be.
Machine learning simply doesn't have the capacity to parse the nuances of individual health needs. It doesn't have the capacity to understand anything, let alone the complexities of medical care. It amplifies bias and it "hallucinates" and current research indicates there's no way to avoid either. All it will take for patients to die is for a ML model to hallucinate an improper diagnosis or treatment that's rubber stamped by an overworked doctor.
Yet despite the fact that it is not and will never be fit for purpose, general use machine learning has been pushed fait accompli into the medical lives of real patients, in service to profit. Whether the clinic itself or the software developers or both, someone is profiting from this while already underserved and vulnerable patients are further neglected and endangered.
This is inevitable by design. Maximising profit necessitates inserting the product into as many use cases as possible irrespective of appropriateness. If not this underserved patient group, another underserved patient group would have been pressed, unconsenting, into unsupervised experiments in ML medicine--and may still. The fewer options and resources people have, the easier they are to coerce. You can do whatever you want to those who have no alternative but to endure it.
For profit to flow upwards, cost must flow downwards. This isn't an abstract numerical principle it's a deadly material fact. Human beings, not abstractions, bear the cost of the AI bubble. The more marginalised and exploited the human beings, the more of the cost they bear. Overexploited nations bear the burden of mining, manufacture, and pollution for the physical infrastructure to exist, overexploited workers bear the burden of making machine learning function at all (all of which I will write more about another day), and now patients who don't have the option to refuse it bear the burden of its overuse. There have been others. There will be more. If the profit isn't flowing to you, the cost is--or it will soon.
It doesn't have to be like this. It's like this because humans made it this way, we could change it. Indeed, we must if we are to survive.
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puzzled-zebra · 10 months
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I don’t normally post things on here, but since I know some folks get worried about a lack of activity from me, I just wanted to let y’all know I’m going to be…busy for the next week or two thanks to the ransomware attack on Hillcrest systems across the nation, whom I work for as a scribe.
Everything is on lockdown electronically which makes everything actually hell. Patient’s safety is at risk in more ways than one and that asshole hacker is making already overworked and underpaid medical staff EVEN MORE overwhelmed. I’m so fucking mad. Why can’t this shit happen to some big mega billionaire corporation? Why healthcare? This country’s system is rough enough on both patients and healthcare workers as is, why make it worse for everyone?!
Can’t order medications without manually writing out each and every one of them and faxing them, can’t order labwork or imaging or make referrals without manually writing each and every one them out and faxing them, we can’t even chart (not like I have time to with my doctor’s style) so I’m just scribbling down changes so I can make proper charts later once this whole mess has been taken care of. Essentially triple the work with no additional pay for it.
On top of it EVERYONE is scared about how the system was breached. Even I am, and I don’t go freaking anywhere with my laptop. Delilah stays at home where she’s hooked up to a password protected wifi and has an absolute tank of an antivirus software that makes her lag for 3 hours. I don’t hardly ever check my email let alone open any new mail. I rarely ever use Delilah to even browse here! I use my phone! But you never know until the source has been traced! It could be anyone, which means could be you, and my anxious butt REALLY doesn’t like that.
And these are just my gripes as a paranoid, overwhelmed, crybaby $10-12/hr scribe (idk if I ever got that $2 raise) with just the added work, but it makes me incredibly upset and stressed about how this will effect our patients. Most of my clinic’s patients are elderly and have problem lists and medication sheets a mile long. Our ERs and hospitals have to divert patients to other hospitals. People are going to die from this ransomware attack on our system. These kinds of delays will kill someone and it’s just heart dropping.
Like, healthcare having shitty overwhelming work hours is essentially part of the territory of working in healthcare. You go home tired and feeling like shit but are happy to know that your 99 year old patient is still kicking and lively and has all their marbles to have enjoyed their golden years and probably a few more to go. But having someone outside of our system disrupt our ability to deliver proper care to patients is just…it’s rough.
I know I’m only a scribe, but I’m my old doctor’s eyes and hands, I make the prescriptions and labs and referrals on his behalf; I’m working with his nurse on what diagnoses codes we need to work with to help insurance be more willing to cover for procedures; they feel like my patients too… It’s… distressing… Knowing all we can do is just hang on and try our best… I just hope it’s enough. I hope it’s only a week. Just a week. God I hope it’ll only last a week.
Anyway, if I suddenly cease any activity over the next 2 week, I’m not dead. I just will be wishing I was while attempting to keep this computer-less system somewhat working or at least organized until the computer system is back.
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missmysme · 1 year
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Mystic Messenger Guest Tournament, Round 1 Part 22
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Top two move on to the next round!
Info under the cut:
Best Reviewer: Faster than anyone yet precise! A famous reviewer who composes reviews in rather cold, aloof manner of speech.
What started him to write reviews was to explain functions to his computer illiterate wife.
Knight of the Light: Manager of I.U.; The manager of the intelligence unit, known as the leader of the knights of the light. Somehow he looks like a paladin.
His nickname, the Light and Shield, is the name of the security software he made.
Lovelyglasses Choi: An optician who makes heart-shaped glasses full of love. She has a very unique manner of speach.
Though she loves glasses than anyone in the world, the pair of glasses she wears have no prescription.
Rhythm Game Master: The master of rhythm games. No one can best him in sensitive touch of fingertips.
After becoming the master of rhythm games, it's said his interested in other fields that can collaborate with rhythm games. For example,. cross-stitching.
Housekeeper: Soonja Kim; She's a professional! A mysterious caretaker who is best in the industry of the 21st era.
Famous in the professional world of caretaking for being mysterious. Rumor has it that she's a ninja... but she's at the top of her field with her super skills.
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Scrivener?? You write on what now
SCRIVENER!!! Oh my god so it's writing software that tragically Costs Money (a LOT of money) but two of my friends chipped in and bought it for me for my birthday last year!! <3
It basically organizes everything for you in the most OCD pleasing way possible.
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So you got your actual doc^ and then in the left corner you have your sidebar which has your other relevant docs sorted into folders. No this does not help me write better, I just spend more time organizing than writing now.
IT JUST MAKES MY BRAIN GO BRRR IN THE BEST WAY.
Anyway Scrivener has a free trial prescription for anyone who wants to try it. And no this post was not sponsored I'm just addicted to this software LMAO.
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sanguinifex · 1 year
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Why you should McFucking Vote Democrat, because Biden is a bureaucratic genius
Ok so like. Bureaucracy is where the fiddly bits of how laws actually work happens. It’s anonymous, unthanked, very hard-working people in cubicles and terrible polo shirts who have to use the worst software ever invented. They’re the ones making and using the spreadsheets for “do you qualify for XYZ or not.”
Biden knows the House Republicans won’t let him pass any new laws worth jack, so his solution is to fine-tune the bureaucracy and its application of existing laws. It’s freaking genius. While a Republican president could technically reverse these reforms, in practice they mostly won’t, because it’s boring procedural spreadsheet stuff and not big flashy new laws banning things. The Republicans aren’t even going to notice half the things he’s fixing.
It is, I reiterate, absolutely genius. Biden’s DHHS has requested that cannabis be downscheduled to the level of prescription cough syrup, he’s stopped disability discrimination in organ transplant decisions and custody decisions, he’s reinstated VA benefits for people were discharged from the military for being queer (which means so much less medical bills for them, and access to prescription drugs including HIV meds), he’s the first president to join a picket line, his FTC appointee is suing Amazon for being a monopoly, union-busting is now punishable by being forced to recognize the union, as VP he was heavily involved in the Affordable Care Act, better known as Obamacare…and that’s just what I can remember off the top of my head while completely exhausted. For those worried about his age, he’s obviously still smart as a tack based on his bureaucratic strategies, and if something were to happen to him, Harris is similarly competent and similarly well-versed in bureaucracy, and she’d make similar policy decisions if in office.
Like, Biden is implementing very similar reforms to what I’ve always wanted, and in pretty much the exact same ways I’d do them. It’s to where I’d vote for him in a primary now. It’s all very well to say “Medicare for All,” but then how do you implement it? And I think Biden is the kind of person who’d have a real answer to that, and more importantly, know exactly who to call on to work out the bits that aren’t his area of expertise, such as “how many computers, servers, and new hires would CMS need to accommodate a quadrupling of beneficiaries?” Or to write the changes to tax code (such as eliminating the income cap on Medicare taxes) to fund said influx.
Compare and contrast Trump’s absolute debacle of his pet border wall. Or his muslim ban. Or covid. Like, the only good thing that came out of his presidency was the increase of the standard deduction for personal income tax, and then that later inadvertently screwed over people working from home during the pandemic because they couldn’t deduct the new home office supplies like desks and office chairs that they had to buy.
Also compare and contrast how quickly 2021-2023 have passed by, compared to how 2017-2020 seemed to drag on forever. I know that, even with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine threatening to turn into WW3, I’ve had distinctly less fear of nuclear escalation during Biden’s presidency than during the Orange Turd’s.
Finally, consider what Biden will be able to do once he doesn’t have to worry about getting elected again. Yes, healthcare reform. Employers currently pay the largest share of health insurance costs for people under 65, and those costs have been going up, largely due to insurers’ and for-profit providers’ price-gouging. Said employers are increasingly upset about these costs, to the point that they would likely be willing to opt for single-payer if the state or federal taxes to support it were, say, 80 or 90% of what they’re currently paying in insurance premiums—which would probably be the case, that or less, since CMS would negotiate lower costs, probably no more than 200% of regular Medicare rates. I can tell you for sure that Aetna is paying hospitals 5 times that, and that extra cost is reflected in premiums and (for self-funded plans) in claims, which employers have to pay.
Will the combined lobbying forces of industry giants like Walmart, Amazon, Boeing, Sitel, AT&T, etc. outweigh the opposing lobbying forces of UHC/ OptumRx, Aetna, Blue Cross, CVS, Walgreens, the legion third party administrators, and for-profit medical groups?
Well, we won’t find out unless you vote Democrat next November! Because Biden is a genuinely progressive and competent president and I’d like to keep him, and no one with a single sane braincell wants the other guy. The other guy will probably get us into WW3 and turn it nuclear. Please register to vote, and then actually vote.
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Life Update
Friends! Readers! The five bots who keep sending me cryptic messages! Hello, greetings, and fond wishes to you all!
It has been a long, long time since I’ve been around, and I offer my sincerest apologies for that. I’ve been doing a lot of outside charity work the past few months, and it has been keeping me busier than I could have possibly imagined.
Last month, I was chair for my childhood church’s Fair Stand, for tragically its final year. We managed to go out with a bang, but for the 9 days I was working from 6 am - 10 pm straight, it really didn’t feel like much of a win at the time.
While there, despite our consistent masking and distancing, my roommie and I both caught Covid. While we both have our boosters and plenty of meds to keep us going, it really did a number on us. I’m actually still currently taking a prescription, and I’ve been sick for well over a month now. Some of my current symptoms are vaguely reminiscent of pneumonia, and I’m hoping I haven’t caught That Again.
In spite of the illness, I’ve also been roped into helping with Another event at said church, a Sunday School Halloween Party at the end of this month. The lady in charge is very dear to me however, so it’s more fun than work now. I can’t wait for everything to come together~!
A lot of you have been sending worried asks, and I’ve wanted to reply to all of you as I got them, but I really haven’t been online as much as I would have liked. The past few months have seen little of a proper in-person social life either, though I did meet someone up at the Fair. ^_^; He’s super sweet, makes phenomenal waffles, and designs almost all of his own clothes. Also spent a good 20 minutes geeking out about our favorite video production software the night we met, so I guess I owe my college professor for encouraging me to take another semester in that class. 
I have some more big things coming up, including another trip to DC this coming November, and maybe a trip out to see some of my friends out in The Bronx this Yuletide season if I can swing it~
I am coming back though, that I promise. I have soooo many ideas still simmering, and you’ve all been sending me such lovely requests that only fuel the fire more! My dream right now however is to finish writing that one Romano piece I’ve been hacking away at for the past... year? Two years? What is Time? How old am I?-
TLDR:
Hello my darlings! I have been ridiculously busy when offline, and I haven’t really had any time or inspiration to write because of that. I’m trying to ease back into it, and while I can’t make promises, I’m going to try my hardest to post a few more things before the end of 2022. Stay tuned; there’s plenty in store~
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marketinsight1234 · 7 months
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Prescription Writing Software Market: Global Industry Analysis and Forecast 2023 – 2030
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Prescription Writing Software Market Size Was Valued at USD 4.09 Billion in 2022, and is Projected to Reach USD 7.38 Billion by 2030, Growing at a CAGR of 7.65% From 2023-2030.
Prescription writing software are specialized computer programs or applications that help healthcare professionals, such as physicians, nurse practitioners, and pharmacists, generate electronic prescriptions for patients. These software solutions are part of the broader category of electronic health record (EHR) or electronic medical record (EMR) systems. They aim to streamline the prescription-writing process, making it more efficient, accurate, and secure than traditional paper-based methods.
Prescription writing software typically includes features that allow healthcare providers to enter patient information, choose medications, specify dosages and instructions, and electronically send the prescription to pharmacies. The software may also include functionality for checking drug interactions, allergies, and other safety considerations, helping healthcare professionals make informed decisions about the prescribed medications.
Get Full PDF Sample Copy of Report: (Including Full TOC, List of Tables & Figures, Chart) @
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The latest research on the Prescription Writing Software market provides a comprehensive overview of the market for the years 2023 to 2030. It gives a comprehensive picture of the global Prescription Writing Software industry, considering all significant industry trends, market dynamics, competitive landscape, and market analysis tools such as Porter's five forces analysis, Industry Value chain analysis, and PESTEL analysis of the Prescription Writing Software market. Moreover, the report includes significant chapters such as Patent Analysis, Regulatory Framework, Technology Roadmap, BCG Matrix, Heat Map Analysis, Price Trend Analysis, and Investment Analysis which help to understand the market direction and movement in the current and upcoming years. The report is designed to help readers find information and make decisions that will help them grow their businesses. The study is written with a specific goal in mind: to give business insights and consultancy to help customers make smart business decisions and achieve long-term success in their particular market areas.
Leading players involved in the Prescription Writing Software Market include:
Epic Systems Corporation (US), eClinicalWorks (US), athenahealth (US), Allscripts Healthcare LLC (US), Cerner Corporation (US), GoodWill International (US), MEDICAL Information Technology Inc. (US), CPSI (US), Meta (US), Elinext (US), EPIC Systems Corporation (US), INFOR (US), Cognizant (US), Oracle (US), Jag products LLC (US), Optum Inc. (US), Change Healthcare (US), SAP (Germany), Koninklijke Philips N.V. (Netherlands), Kaaspro (India), Duchang IT (China) 
If You Have Any Query Prescription Writing Software Market Report, Visit:
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Segmentation of Prescription Writing Software Market:
By Type
Cloud-based
On-premise
By Functionality
Clinical Documentation
Patient Management
Reporting & Analytics
By Practice Size
Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (SMEs)
Large Enterprise
By End-User
Hospitals
Clinics
Research Centres
Market Segment by Regions: -
North America (US, Canada, Mexico)
Eastern Europe (Bulgaria, The Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Rest of Eastern Europe)
Western Europe (Germany, UK, France, Netherlands, Italy, Russia, Spain, Rest of Western Europe)
Asia Pacific (China, India, Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam, The Philippines, Australia, New Zealand, Rest of APAC)
Middle East & Africa (Turkey, Bahrain, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, UAE, Israel, South Africa)
South America (Brazil, Argentina, Rest of SA)
What to Expect in Our Report?
(1) A complete section of the Prescription Writing Software market report is dedicated for market dynamics, which include influence factors, market drivers, challenges, opportunities, and trends.
(2) Another broad section of the research study is reserved for regional analysis of the Prescription Writing Software market where important regions and countries are assessed for their growth potential, consumption, market share, and other vital factors indicating their market growth.
(3) Players can use the competitive analysis provided in the report to build new strategies or fine-tune their existing ones to rise above market challenges and increase their share of the Prescription Writing Software market.
(4) The report also discusses competitive situation and trends and sheds light on company expansions and merger and acquisition taking place in the Prescription Writing Software market. Moreover, it brings to light the market concentration rate and market shares of top three and five players.
(5) Readers are provided with findings and conclusion of the research study provided in the Prescription Writing Software Market report.
Our study encompasses major growth determinants and drivers, along with extensive segmentation areas. Through in-depth analysis of supply and sales channels, including upstream and downstream fundamentals, we present a complete market ecosystem.
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hisaribi · 29 days
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Place your bets if google also gonna leave and where do I put my fics to. Also like ok they turned off AdSense (which was sort of useless before, but now it's impossible to use), maybe that counts. Miro who also sort left at least allowed non-paid users to still have their boards (I think). Also I sorta worry about Figma. Adobe's been pirated for ages now so whatever
And steam (they did already make gamedev from around here pay tax both in Russia and the USA though), and egs (they do allow payments from Russia but mostly through China for gacha-games, including Fortnight)
Gosh I probably use a lot of other software that can be blocked
Also I should probably go to Kazakhstan and buy a sim-card and maybe create a payment card and all the tax things here and move my google accounts there, but I have no money for food even, because of lay off that happened in the begining of summer, and I only have like 50 bucks till the end of the month. Which might be surviviable if I didn't have to deal with credit card debt and mortgage
Also it is sorta funny, all the you can't use our products, considering rn one of our regions is bombed using american bombs, and I say funny because otherwise I'm gotta get aneurysm
Like on one side govt tries to block access to a bunch of sites (I literally can't use ao3 or YouTube without VPN, which is also getting blocked), on the other our accounts and accesses are getting under sanctions, like when I still worked in creatives production I had to use VPN again to get an access for the base stuff I needed to work with (once again, some were actually blocked by the gov, but a lot were blocked by the site themselves), and I sort of just think what else would I have to deal with
And ye-ye, don't @ at me about it's deserved or whatever, I'm just annoyed and whining
Also Durov was arrested because of telegram in France, and I use telegram as my main blogging platform, so will I have to just delete it because of this bullshit as well
Discord is also acting out for some of my peers, and if I'll have to go there with VPN I'm gonna be so annoyed. I'm already annoyed with it being like oh buy nitro, buy this, buy that, which it throws at me every time I try to attach file or just write a message, but it's also like sorry payments from you won't work, you still get to see ads though
It's also 6 am I woke up from the pain because I had troubles feeding myself and gosh I need meds and I need to buy them because I only have them enough to last till Saturday, and also I got a new prescription for new meds but I have no clue how much would it cost but also I feel exactly nothing so whatever
I just hope your day is better than mine
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smalltofedsblog · 2 months
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How to Make the Pentagon ‘Software-Centric’
The Pentagon can’t take the years it normally does writing capability requirements as today’s technology will already be irrelevant by then. Approaches include changing the way requirements are written, capturing them in “concise, high-level needs statements in place of the detailed, prescriptive requirements documents used in the past.
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emr-ehrs · 3 months
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Ways EMR for Urgent Care Can Benefit You
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Electronic Medical Records which is also called EMR is a support system for different medical facilities. Urgent care centers, which operate at a fast pace and deal with a wide range of medical issues, can significantly benefit from the implementation of EMR systems. The efficiency and accuracy of the EMRs are crucial. Implementing Electronic Medical Records (EMR) systems can revolutionize the way these facilities operate, bringing numerous benefits to both healthcare providers and patients. Here are several ways that EMR for urgent care can benefit you.
1. Improved Patient Care and Safety
One of the primary benefits of EMR systems is the enhancement of patient care and safety. EMRs provide healthcare providers with instant access to a patient's medical history, allergies, current medications, and previous treatments. This comprehensive view allows for more informed decision-making and reduces the risk of medical errors.
2. Increased Efficiency and Productivity
The EMR for urgent care systems streamline many administrative tasks, freeing up valuable time for healthcare providers to focus on patient care. Tasks such as charting, prescription writing, and appointment scheduling are automated, reducing the time spent on paperwork. This increased efficiency can lead to shorter wait times for patients and a higher throughput of patient visits, improving the overall productivity of the urgent care center. Visit EMR-EHRS today.
3. Enhanced Coordination of Care
Electronic Medical Records (EMR) systems play a crucial role in coordinating care within urgent care centers and across the broader healthcare system. This ensures that all providers involved in a patient's care have access to the same accurate and up-to-date information, improving continuity of care and patient outcomes. Electronic health record software or EMR systems are absolutely necessary tools. It helps in coordinating care in urgent care settings. By centralizing patient information, enabling real-time data sharing, ensuring interoperability, and improving communication, EMR systems enhance the efficiency and effectiveness of care delivery.
4. Better Data Management and Accessibility
EMR systems of EMR EHR software eliminate the need for paper records, reducing the risk of lost or misplaced documents. All patient information is stored digitally, making it easily accessible to authorized personnel at any time. This improved data management not only enhances the accuracy and completeness of medical records but also simplifies the process of retrieving and sharing patient information when needed.
5. Enhanced Patient Engagement
Many EMR systems include patient portals, which allow patients to access their medical records, view test results, and communicate with their healthcare providers online. Patients can also use these portals to schedule appointments, request prescription refills, and receive educational materials, enhancing their overall experience and satisfaction with the urgent care center.
6. Financial Benefits and Cost Savings
Practicing an urgent care EMR can lead to financial benefits and even cost savings for urgent care centers. By automating administrative tasks and reducing paperwork, EMRs can lower operational costs and improve billing accuracy. This can lead to faster reimbursements and a reduction in billing errors, enhancing the financial stability of the practice.
Adopting the EMR systems in urgent care centers offer a multitude of benefits. By leveraging the capabilities of EMR for urgent care systems, urgent care providers can deliver higher quality care, streamline their operations, and create a better experience for their patients. As the healthcare landscape continues to evolve, the implementation of EMR systems will remain a critical factor in achieving success and sustainability in urgent care. Call 480-782-1116 to know more about EMR-EHRS.
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douchebagbrainwaves · 3 months
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YOU GUYS I JUST THOUGHT OF THIS
More likely, you'll just find that for some mysterious reason good things happen to them too. Starting a startup is not like having an idea I didn't want to be novelists.1 Thanks to Sam Altman and Jessica Livingston for reading drafts of this. If you've never seen a word before, it is genuine.2 He would say that this has happened to. Another group was worried when they realized they had to do it? To change the interface both have to agree to change it easily, or at least a generation to turn people into East Germans luckily for England. Dilution Users have worried about that since the site was about bands. In server-based application now for less than you think you'll need, maybe 50% to 100% more, because software changes fast and government changes slow. And acquirers tell me privately that revenue is not what growth rate makes a company a startup.
There's no incentive that would make me eligible for prescription drugs if I approached everyday life the same way as saying that something is worth doing, especially if you have a competent startup lawyer handle the deal for you, as Google did for Kleiner and Sequoia. There is nothing more valuable than the advice of someone whose judgement you respect, what does it add to consider the cost. A stage. Once investors like you is that you actually become a better investment.3 It shouldn't be that surprising that colleges can't teach students how to write software. Reminder: What I'm looking for are programs that run on Web servers and use Web pages as the interface. This lets me get ip addresses and prices intact.4 But I don't think so. Maybe the best way to explain how it's recession-proof is to do things that would make me eligible for prescription drugs if I approached everyday life the same way I write software: I sit down and start implementing it. In retrospect, he was before he became a professor at MIT.5 Possibly not. But we could tell the founders were earnest, energetic, and independent-minded enough to start a startup, you'll probably fail.
Some investors might expect the founders to accept vesting for a sum this size, and others that aren't.6 But when you understand the problem. Going upstairs his bulk will be more of a placeholder than an actual label—like putting NMI on a form that asks what you're going to have a book about how to make them irrelevant.7 There seem to be a tradition of startups taking VC money, you should do is to treat it as an upper bound on the size of the venture business, which have evolved the way they write software. Would anyone seriously argue that Cobol is equivalent in power to founders is just don't die, but the most important predictor of success. We thought Airbnb was a bad idea was that it was valuable and dangerous, and what that will mean for you if you choose them. It will always be lots of Java programmers, so if you're measuring usage you need a window of about two years when spam was increasing rapidly but all the big email services had terrible filters. So, in practice, the way to make yourself work on hard problems.8 Number one will be the limit; the number of temptations around you.
Notes
Only founders of Hewlett Packard said it first, to pretend that the Internet was as much as Drew Houston needed Dropbox, or working in middle management at a discount of 30% means when it converts. No VC will admit they're influenced by buzz.
We didn't try to go sell the bad idea, period. This seems to them this way, without becoming a Texas oilman was not just something the telephone, the space of careers does. Correction: Earlier versions used a technicality to get them to be discovered. After reading a draft of this essay wrote: My feeling with the guy who came to work on stuff you love: a It did.
They'd be interchangeable if markets stood still. Cost, again. How many times that conversation was repeated. If Congress passes the founder of the word as in Boston, and tax rates.
You can get rich, purely mercenary founders will seem as if having good intentions were enough to be room for something new if the similarity extended to returns.
If they no longer needed, big companies weren't plagued by internal inefficiencies, they'd be called unfair. With a classic fixed sized round, or your job will consist of bad customs as well.
If there's an Indian grocery store near you doesn't mean you suck. It seems likely that in the chaos anyway.
Above. But when you depend on Aristotle more than linearly with its size.
They hate their bread and butter cases. It may have been sitting in their hearts that if you do if your goal is to be sharply differentiated, so you'd have to do that. That's probably true of nationality and religion as well. How can I count you in?
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