This isn't limited to us now using technological systems for steps. Unless you're arguing the portion of the article covering how the same errors used to happen more often before the system was put in place is incorrect.
Fixing ALL false alerts is an impractical goal but lowering them to something reasonable to work with day to day is not. Epic is a complex system and a medical system but that doesn't mean every change involves you going to the government, a great deal of it can be customized with local Epic trained staff you were mandated to have when you bought the product. Doesn't make it easy but the majority of the problem is within the organization not the government or vendor.
Anyway my overall disagreement with the article isn't that I think the technology is perfect rather it's written like it's worse than it was before because of the technology when it even admits things are better than before because of the technology. It did little to convince me technology led a hospital to do anything vs the same problems the hospital has always had with it's verification procedures.