How is the electronic health record being used? Use of EHR data to assess physician-level variability in technology use
Autor: | Diane Hauser, Daniel M. Stein, Sarah Nosal, Jessica S. Ancker, Rainu Kaushal, Lisa M. Kern, Alison Edwards |
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Rok vydání: | 2014 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male medicine.medical_specialty Nurse practitioners media_common.quotation_subject Problem list Health Informatics Primary care Research and Applications Clinical decision support system Physicians Primary Care health services administration Health care Electronic Health Records Humans Medicine Nurse Practitioners Quality (business) Decision Making Computer-Assisted health care economics and organizations Retrospective Studies media_common business.industry Retrospective cohort study United States Informatics Family medicine Female business |
Zdroj: | Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association. 21:1001-1008 |
ISSN: | 1527-974X 1067-5027 |
Popis: | Background Studies of the effects of electronic health records (EHRs) have had mixed findings, which may be attributable to unmeasured confounders such as individual variability in use of EHR features. Objective To capture physician-level variations in use of EHR features, associations with other predictors, and usage intensity over time. Methods Retrospective cohort study of primary care providers eligible for meaningful use at a network of federally qualified health centers, using commercial EHR data from January 2010 through June 2013, a period during which the organization was preparing for and in the early stages of meaningful use. Results Data were analyzed for 112 physicians and nurse practitioners, consisting of 430 803 encounters with 99 649 patients. EHR usage metrics were developed to capture how providers accessed and added to patient data (eg, problem list updates), used clinical decision support (eg, responses to alerts), communicated (eg, printing after-visit summaries), and used panel management options (eg, viewed panel reports). Provider-level variability was high: for example, the annual average proportion of encounters with problem lists updated ranged from 5% to 60% per provider. Some metrics were associated with provider, patient, or encounter characteristics. For example, problem list updates were more likely for new patients than established ones, and alert acceptance was negatively correlated with alert frequency. Conclusions Providers using the same EHR developed personalized patterns of use of EHR features. We conclude that physician-level usage of EHR features may be a valuable additional predictor in research on the effects of EHRs on healthcare quality and costs. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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