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The Environmental Impacts of Electronic Medical Records Versus Paper Records at a Large Eye Hospital in India: Life Cycle Assessment Study.

Cordelia KwonLernik EssayeiMichael SpencerTom EtheridgeVenkatesh RengarajNatrajan VengadesanCassandra L Thiel
Published in: Journal of medical Internet research (2024)
The climate-changing emissions associated with an EMR system are heavily dependent on the sources of electricity. With a decarbonized electricity source, the EMR system's GHG emissions are on par with paper medical record-keeping, and decarbonized grids would likely have a much broader benefit to society. Though we found that the EMR system produced more emissions than a paper record-keeping system, this study does not account for potential expanded environmental gains from EMRs, including expanding access to care while reducing patient travel and operational efficiencies that can reduce unnecessary or redundant care.
Keyphrases
  • life cycle
  • healthcare
  • palliative care
  • human health
  • quality improvement
  • climate change
  • chronic pain
  • heavy metals