Electronic prescriptions, which have provided tangible momentum for digitalization in the health sector, are one specific example of this. According to the plans of the German government, physicians have been obliged to issue an electronic version of traditional paper prescriptions since 1 January 2024. This makes it possible to prescribe and deliver medications more quickly, reliably and efficiently. Doctors can send digital prescriptions to pharmacies through the electronic prescription service and this simplifies the process for all those involved – and it also prevents mistakes, as it eliminates the risk of reading errors or mistakes caused by handwriting.
Digital medical records are also part of the comprehensive digitalization plans being pursued by the German government. They contain a patient’s complete medical history as the central access point for important information like medical findings, physicians’ letters or medication plans without masses of pieces of paper piling up at doctors’ offices. By pooling information centrally, however, physicians not only quickly obtain an overview of previous sicknesses and operations. Working stages, which were previously handled in analog form, can be directly transferred to the digital world through the digital medical records, errors can be minimized and important documents can be preserved without the risk of losing any information.
The essential prerequisite for making full use of the numerous benefits of these kinds of measures for digitalization in the health sector is having a connection to telematics infrastructure, i.e., the digital network in the health sector.