New Hampshire
Related: About this forumAn 84-year-old doctor who refuses to use a computer has lost her medical license
Aside from a fax machine and landline telephone, there isn't much technology in the office of physician Anna Konopka, 84.
Instead, her patients' records are tucked into two file cabinets, which sit in a tiny office next door to her 160-year-old clapboard house in New London, N.H. Records are meticulously handwritten, she said. Konopka does have a typewriter; but it's broken, and its parts have been discontinued.
With medicine in the United States becoming increasingly regulated and as more doctors are expected to keep records electronically Konopka's style of doctoring had attracted about 25 patients a week. Some had complicated conditions like chronic pain. Some didn't have insurance. Konopka says she would see anyone who can pay $50 in cash.
But she no longer can.
Konopka said she felt forced to surrender her medical license in September after New Hampshire Board of Medicine officials challenged her record-keeping, prescribing practices and medical decision-making, according to court documents.
She said she wonders if her license was in part taken away because of her inability and unwillingness to use technology to diagnose her patients or log her patients' prescriptions as part of New Hampshire's mandatory electronic drug monitoring program. The program, signed into effect in 2014, is an effort to reduce opioid overdoses.
Konopka, who was a licensed medical practitioner for 55 years, insists that patients prescribed painkillers were always given small dosages. If not for her prescriptions, they would be in constant pain, she said.
The [electronic] system right now, with this opioid war, they have no common sense with what they're doing. Bureaucrats who don't know medicine they are getting this kind of idea that they can handle this type of pain without narcotics.
At: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/to-your-health/wp/2017/11/29/an-84-year-old-doctor-who-refuses-to-use-a-computer-has-lost-her-medical-license/?utm_term=.edbf967e06cc
TexasTowelie
(116,872 posts)I wonder why it took the Washington Post so long to cover it since there doesn't appear to be any additional reporting beyond what occurred in the New Hampshire press.
sandensea
(22,850 posts)unless it's a mass shooting, a rail car disaster, or something like it.
I guess it's more or less the same everywhere in the world.
MattP
(3,304 posts)lunasun
(21,646 posts)No not true you can prescribe heavy narcotics but need to report it. Why the wapo headline ?
Doubt if her license was lost just due to lack of EMRs , she mentions opioids and the link already hints at medical decisions and not using technology for diagnosis