"History has shown that things that improve healthcare become part of what is used," Blumenthal said. "I propose to you that in a few years doctors will all support EHRs," he said. "Using EHRs will become a core competency for physicians. And once we've established that, it will be considered an absolute requisite."
Blumenthal compared the kick-off of federal incentives for meaningful use of electronic health records in 2011 to boarding an escalator. "I think we're going to see the upward slope of the adoption curve within a year or two; but it will be difficult to predict the slope," he said.
Carolyn Clancy, MD, director of the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, said the usefulness of health data will naturally drive healthcare IT adoption. "Information is the lifeblood of medicine," she said. "Clinicians are trained to look at patients one at a time. But, what's missing is aggregated information."
Andy Slavitt, CEO of Ingenix said, "One of the saddest parts of our jobs is that no one is asking the questions they once wondered about, but thought there were no answers to. Answers are available, they just aren't getting to doctors. "
"There's a lot going on in the trenches that is the only thing that keeps this flawed healthcare system going day in and day out," he said.