LOS ANGELES, CA--(Marketwire - October 28, 2009) - MMR Information Systems' (
OTCBB:
MMRF)
MMRPro, which enables doctors who do not have an Electronic Medical Records
(EMR) system to digitize and store paper records through a secure Web-based
portal, is envisioned as the bridge between fully paper-based medical
offices and the adoption of computerized medical records to qualify for
stimulus funds under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA).
Electronic Medical Records are being questioned, according to an article in
Sunday's Washington Post titled "Electronic medical records not seen as a
cure-all." The article cited numerous instances of critical errors made by
large EMR systems, ranging from software bugs that misdiagnosed five people
with herpes to another that systematically gave adult doses of medicine to
children. The article raised issues about the current effectiveness of
Health IT products, both in the United States and around the world.
Designed for small to mid-size physician practices, MMRPro
(
www.MyMedicalRecordsMD.com) offers a solution to the EMR problem by
allowing doctors to digitize patient records without resulting in a major
makeover in how they run their office or costly investments in a
non-standardized EMR system. In addition to enabling doctors to scan and
digitize patient records, MMRPro features selected electronic order entry
and e-prescribing, both of which are meaningful use measurements to qualify
for stimulus funds.
"MMRPro bridges the gap for the more than 85% of U.S. physicians who do not
have an EMR system by allowing them to enter the digital age without
forcing them to try to make the immediate, expensive leap into
non-standardized technology and change the way they practice medicine,"
said Robert H. Lorsch, Chairman and CEO of MMR Information Systems, Inc.
"Mistakes cited in The Washington Post article are not likely to happen
with MMRPro," he added.
MMRPro also includes a proprietary Kodak-branded hardware and software
solution and costs a doctor's office less than $20,000 over three years for
the entire system -- a fraction of what would be spent on hardware,
software and training for a typical EMR in just one year.
MMRPro integrates proven technology that is at the core of any doctor's
office operation. "This is a universal solution," Lorsch emphasized. "Any
doctor -- anywhere in the world -- needs to be able to scan and digitize
patient records and share them with their patients."
An example of the potential worldwide market for MMR's products is
reflected in the Company's entry into China with Unis-Tonghe Technology
(Zhengzhou) Co., Ltd., a subsidiary of Unisplendour Corporation, one of
China's leading IT firms. Unis plans to integrate MMRPro in its medical
records development for China's healthcare market, and facilitate its
offering of MMR's technologies to the Ministry of Health and other
government, financial, legal and medical entities in China.
MMRPro also enables doctors to share their patients' medical records in
real time through a patient portal (
www.MMRPatientView.com) built on the
same proprietary patented platform as its MyMedicalRecords Personal Health
Record (PHR) and Emergency View (
www.MyMedicalRecords.com). Through the
multilingual MMRPatientView, patients can upgrade to a full-featured
Personal Health Record account which has the potential of reimbursing a
physician for all out-of-pocket costs of the system.
"Our solution represents the true meaning of a meaningful use by allowing
patients a complete copy of their patient file in real time which they have
access to in any medical emergency from any Internet-connected computer,"
Lorsch said, alluding to a comment in the above-referenced article made by
an emergency room physician who complained that "I can't see my patients
because I'm at a screen entering data."
Physician dissatisfaction was another statistic cited in The Washington
Post article; the article indicated that a major portion of the physicians
using EMR systems are now uninstalling them.
"MMRPro does not require doctors to change the way they treat patients,
handle information, train staff or run their office," Lorsch noted. "Our
system allows doctors to use patient charts the same way they always have
-- only with MMRPro, day-forward records are now digitized and accessible
to the doctor through a secure, Web-based portal."
About MMR Information Systems, Inc.
MMR Information Systems, Inc. (
OTCBB:
MMRF), through its wholly-owned
operating subsidiary, MyMedicalRecords, Inc. ("MMR"), provides secure and
easy-to-use online Personal Health Records ("PHRs") and electronic safe
deposit box storage solutions, serving consumers, healthcare professionals,
employers, insurance companies, unions and professional organizations and
affinity groups. MyMedicalRecords enables individuals and families to
access their medical records and other important documents, such as birth
certificates, passports, insurance policies and wills anytime from anywhere
using the Internet. The MyMedicalRecords Personal Health Record is built on
proprietary, patented technologies to allow documents, images and voicemail
messages to be transmitted and stored in the system using a variety of
methods, including fax, phone, or file upload without relying on any
specific electronic medical record platform to populate a user's account.
The Company's professional offering, MMRPro, is designed to give
physicians' offices an easy and cost-effective solution to digitizing
paper-based medical records and sharing them with patients in real time.
MMR is an Independent Software Vendor Partner with Kodak to deliver an
integrated turnkey EMR solution for small to mid-size physician practices.
MMR clients include AFL-CIO, Alexian Brothers Hospital Network, Coverdell,
LegalZoom, The Latino Coalition, MedicAlert, NRA, Qvisory, XN Financial and
others. MMR is also an integrated service provider on Google Health. To
learn more about MMR Information Systems, Inc. visit
www.mmrinformationsystems.com.
Forward-Looking Statements
Any statements contained in this press release that refer to future events
or other non-historical matters are forward-looking statements. These
statements relate to future events or our future financial performance. In
some cases, you can identify forward-looking statements by terminology such
as "should," "expects," "believes," "potential," or the negative of such
terms and other comparable terminology. MMR Information Systems, Inc.
disclaims any intent or obligation to update any forward-looking
statements. These forward-looking statements are based on MMR Information
Systems, Inc.'s reasonable expectations as of the date of this press
release and are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual
results to differ materially from current expectations, as detailed from
time to time in MMR Information Systems, Inc.'s public filings with the
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
Contact Information: CONTACT:
Bobbie Volman
MMR Information Systems, Inc.
(310) 476-7002, Ext. 2005
bvolman@mmrmail.com
Michael Selsman
Public Communications Co.
(310) 553-5732
ms@publiccommunications.biz