Beginning in 1990, Reg Smith worked at the Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville where, as everywhere, physicians still recorded important patient information with pen and paper. A systems and procedures administrator, he and his team tirelessly worked to develop and improve the paperless outpatient practice.
Before the internet and social media became status quo, Smith's team faced numerous issues in successfully automating clinical health records:
- Adding work stations, network wiring and necessary infrastructure to buildings not designed for them
- Identifying health care information technology vendors to accept the challenge
- Quantifying automation's benefits sufficient to offset operational costs
- Compliance with legal requirements for medical documentation
- Ensuring against power failures or hardware crashes;
- Ensuring the security of medical records
- Acquiring physician support for the new system
The Automation of the Clinical Practice is a memoir of one man's career in the health care industry during times of great change and opportunity. Smith recalls his twenty-four-year service with the Mayo Clinic and his role in developing the simplified automation process that physicians use today.
About the Author: Reg Smith worked in the health-care industry for thirty-five years, twenty-four of which were at the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Florida.
From Flint, Michigan, Smith holds a bachelor's degree from Andrews University, a master's degree from the University of Michigan, and a doctor of education from the University of Florida.
Now retired, Smith and his wife of forty-eight years, Bonnie, live on Lake Martin in Alabama.