
In an age of iPads, smartphones, and minute-by-minute Facebook updates, does a visit to your doctor's office sometimes seem like a trip back in time? Does your doc scribble notes onto sheets of paper and then slide them into an ever-expanding folder that gets stored in a huge file case?
Although many doctors still keep notes in files, more and more patients are seeing laptops instead of clipboards in the exam room. Doctors and hospitals are turning to new health information technology, and while these changes won't happen overnight, they are coming.

Understanding EHRs
Electronic health records (EHR) — also called electronic medical records (EMR) — help patients as well as health professionals. That's because they make it easier for you (and your parents, depending on your age) to see your health records.
An EHR is a computerized collection of a patient's health records. EHRs include information like your age, gender, ethnicity, health history, medications, allergies, immunization status, lab test results, hospital discharge instructions, and billing information.
Because electronic health records are digital, they can be shared easily among your various health care providers. So, for example, if you see a dermatologist and an asthma specialist in addition to your primary care doctor, all these doctors (and their nurses and other caregivers) will see the same records.
If one doctor orders a lab test, they all see the results. If one doctor puts you on a new medication, the others get to see what it is — which is good for you, because there's less chance of one doctor prescribing a medication that could adversely interact with another medication and cause problems.