A general-purpose EMR is like a general-purpose vehicle: it gets you where you need to go, but it is not optimised for the specific terrain of any single journey. For specialists — particularly cardiologists and paediatricians, two of India’s largest specialty OPD volumes — a generic clinical template is more hindrance than help. Specialty EMR customisation transforms the clinical documentation experience from a generic form-filling exercise into a specialty-specific clinical tool that mirrors how the specialist actually thinks, examines, and decides. This article explains what cardiology and paediatric EMR customisation looks like in practice.
Why Cardiology Needs Its Own EMR Template Structure
The cardiologist’s clinical note is fundamentally different from a general physician’s. It includes structured data elements that are either absent or peripheral in general practice: NYHA functional classification, CCS angina class, ejection fraction and echocardiographic parameters, ECG interpretation (rhythm, axis, intervals, ST changes), stress test results (Bruce protocol stage achieved, METS, symptoms at peak), catheterisation findings (coronary anatomy, stenosis percentages), and device-specific data (pacemaker type, last interrogation date, sensing and pacing thresholds).
A well-designed cardiology EMR template presents these elements as structured fields — drop-down menus, number inputs with physiological ranges, and auto-calculated scores — rather than free text. When NYHA class is a drop-down (I/II/III/IV) rather than a text field, it becomes searchable, reportable, and comparable across visits. When ejection fraction is stored as a number, the system can flag a significant drop from the previous echo as a clinical alert at the next visit — turning a database of structured records into a proactive monitoring tool.
Paediatric Templates: Weight-Based Dosing, Growth Charts, and Developmental Milestones
Paediatric medicine presents a unique template challenge: children are not small adults, and almost every clinical parameter — from normal vital signs to drug doses — changes with age and weight. A paediatric EMR template must integrate the child’s current weight, height, and head circumference (for infants) at the start of every visit, auto-plotting these on WHO growth charts and flagging deviations from expected centiles as clinical prompts.
Weight-based medication dosing — where the dose is calculated as mg/kg — should be automated in the prescribing module: when the doctor selects ‘Amoxicillin 40mg/kg/day in 3 divided doses’ for a child weighing 15kg, the system should automatically calculate and display ‘200mg (5ml of 125mg/5ml suspension) three times daily’ — the specific dose and volume ready for the prescription, eliminating the manual calculation that is a common source of paediatric dosing errors.
Integrating Scoring Tools and Clinical Decision Aids
Both cardiology and paediatrics rely on validated clinical scoring systems that inform treatment decisions. For cardiology: CHA2DS2-VASc score (AF stroke risk), HAS-BLED score (bleeding risk on anticoagulation), TIMI and GRACE scores (ACS risk stratification), and Killip classification (AMI severity). For paediatrics: the Paediatric Early Warning Score (PEWS), Downes Score (respiratory distress), CAMHS tools for developmental assessment, and WHO IMCI classification algorithms.
EMR templates that include auto-calculating versions of these scores — where the doctor simply enters the clinical parameters and the score is calculated automatically — ensure consistent application of these tools across every relevant patient encounter. A cardiologist who must manually calculate the CHA2DS2-VASc score for every AF patient is more likely to skip the calculation when busy; one whose EMR calculates it automatically simply reviews the result.
Practical Steps for Specialty Template Customisation
Most modern EMR platforms allow template customisation through a visual template builder — no coding required. The process for cardiology or paediatric customisation typically involves: defining the standard consultation structure (which sections appear in what order), specifying which fields are required vs. optional, configuring the data type of each field (free text, number, drop-down, calculated), and linking calculated fields to clinical scoring algorithms.
A recommended approach: start with the national or international specialty society’s standard documentation recommendations (ACC/AHA for cardiology, IAP for paediatrics), build the template to match these recommendations, then refine based on the specific practice patterns of the department. Engage two or three senior clinicians in the template design process — their specialty-specific knowledge will identify fields and workflows that a non-clinical template designer would miss.
📊 Key Facts & Statistics
| Metric | Data / Finding |
| Key cardiology-specific structured fields in EMR | NYHA class, EF, ECG, cath findings, device data |
| Most common paediatric prescribing error type | Dose calculation error (weight-based) |
| Reduction in paediatric dosing errors with automated calculation | Up to 60% |
| IAP recommended growth chart (India) | WHO Child Growth Standards (0–5 years) |
| Auto-calculated scores in cardiology EMR | CHA2DS2-VASc, HAS-BLED, GRACE, TIMI, Killip |
| Specialty EMR adoption rate in India (cardiologists, 2024) | ~45% using specialty templates |
| Time saving with specialty template vs. generic EMR | 2–3 min/patient in structured specialties |
🔄 Specialty EMR Template Structure: Cardiology vs. Paediatrics
| Template Section | Cardiology EMR | Paediatric EMR |
| Patient vitals | BP (both arms), HR, SpO2, oedema grade | Weight, height, HC, BP centile, temp, SpO2 |
| Structured assessment | NYHA class, CCS class, EF% | WHO centile, PEWS score, Downes score |
| Investigations | ECG, Echo, Stress test, Cath findings | Growth chart, developmental milestones, immunisation |
| Prescribing | Device settings, cardiac drug doses | Weight-based dose auto-calculation |
| Scoring tools | CHA2DS2-VASc, HAS-BLED, GRACE | IMCI classification, IAP growth standards |
| Follow-up triggers | EF drop > 5%, new wall motion abnormality | Growth faltering (< 2 centile drops), missed vaccines |
✅ Key Takeaways
- Cardiology EMR templates must include structured fields for NYHA class, ejection fraction, ECG, and scoring tools.
- Paediatric EMR templates must integrate WHO growth charts and auto-calculate weight-based drug doses.
- Automated clinical scoring (CHA2DS2-VASc, PEWS) ensures consistent application across all relevant patients.
- Specialty template customisation requires engagement of senior clinicians from the specialty — not just IT teams.
- Structured specialty templates make data searchable and reportable — enabling quality improvement and audit.
📚 References
- American College of Cardiology. AHA/ACC Performance Measures for Adults with CAD. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2016;68(10):1266–1299.
- Indian Academy of Pediatrics. IAP Standard Treatment Guidelines. Mumbai: IAP; 2023.
- WHO. Child Growth Standards. Geneva: WHO; 2006. Available at who.int/childgrowth.
- Institute for Healthcare Improvement. SBAR Technique for Communication. Cambridge: IHI; 2022.
- Sittig DF, Singh H. A New Sociotechnical Model for Studying Health IT. Qual Saf Health Care. 2010;19(Suppl 3):i68.
