Computer Aids in the Physician's Office

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Computer Aids in the Physician's Office (CAPO) is an electronic medical record system aimed at practicing office physician. The previous BBN-MGH system, Hospital Computer Project, was for a large teaching hospital.

History

In 1971, Bolt Beranek and Newman (BBN) initiated a new project, Computer Aids in the Physician's Office (CAPO).

Components

The basic components include Appointment scheduling - Billing - Cumulative patient profiles(A-B-C). The concept included patient-history application which had online questionnaire's text and branching structure to the patients which translated to format of physicians medical summary of the answers. Of all the modules, automated patient-history taking was important and key feature.

Reception and Implementation

The original CAPO was not widely accepted as-is, as most physicians wanted some changes to the history format. So some minor changes were made and physicians' were satisfied with customizations made. Thus it was more individually customized.

It was not widely used for the cost of implementation was too high for most private physicians.

References

  1. Medical Application of Computers at BBN by Paul Castleman
  2. THE HUMAN SIDE OF THE A-B-C OF CAPO by Jan F. Brandeis, Ph.D.