algos:Price of the EMR and overall costs may not be concerns to physicians in large orthopedic groups, each of which takes home $600,000 a year or more, but it is a great concern, possibly even the primary concern, to family practitioners that average $138,000 a year in income. It is flippant to blythely state price should not be the primary concern when purchasing an EMR, I actually agree. Price of the EMR is not the greatest factor but cost is, including all the hidden costs of extra hardware, links programs, not-included necessary parts of an office practice such as a scheduler our output to a billing company, training, and absurdly expensive recurring fees for who knows WTF. Cost matters most.
Algos, I don't know that I'd go so far as to say price matters most, because a piece of junk unusable EMR is gonna cost you a whole lot more in the long run than one that's reasonably priced but works better. I would say that functionality matters most, because what sense does it make on spend a dime on software that doesn't work for you and only serves to give you heartburn?
As doctors here on emrupdate, along with our vendor and IT peers, we can help steer doctors in the right direction when it comes to EMR software. Although we can encourage and recommend to vendors to make their pricing more competitive, we really have little influence on what they choose to charge for their services. After all, since many (most) are private firms, we don't really know what thier cost for R&D was, or what they need to charge in order to turn a profit and in turn do more R&D.
Bottom line, just like any other capital purchase, if you can't afford a particular EMR, you're not going to spend a ton of time looking at it. You can tell from the posts over the years that docs will kind of self-identify their price point based on the companies they are asking about. Dr. X looking at SOAPware, Amazing Charts has a different threshold than Dr. Y who wants to know the differences between eMD's, eCW and NextGen. Now, don't get me wrong, that's usually just a starting point, and education about a particular EMR might make them choose to spend a bit more. The point is, they have a choice.
I mean, you might decide that you have a budget for Amazing Charts, but if you fall in love with eCW, you might choose to stretch a bit to make it work, and that's something we've seem a lot of here in the past. Likewise, you may think that eMD's is out of your price range, but then you might somehow manage to sweet-talk David Winn into giving you this like totally killer deal and bada-bing! now you have a great EMR and you don't have to live on TopRamen for the next 5 years. Just sayin'.