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Oman Medical Journal. 2013; 28 (6): 450-453
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-142969

ABSTRACT

A confidential inquiry by the Directorate General of health affairs, Makkah region, Saudi Arabia, found physicians were resistant to enter patient-related information in the electronic medical records system at different hospitals. This study aims to highlight their computer literacy needs. This cross-sectional survey was conducted on physicians using a structured questionnaire bearing nine questions/stems with dichotomous answers, [i.e., yes/no] that was distributed among physicians at six different Ministry of Health hospitals in the Makkah Region, Saudi Arabia, between May and August 2009. The results for future needs in computer skills were categorized as "none" if the rate of answer "yes" to any stem was 0-25%, "little" if 26-50%, "some" if 51-75% and "substantial" if >75% rated "yes". The response rate of 82% of determined sample size [n = 451] was attained. Computer literacy improvement elements [CLIE], i.e., "word processing software skills [MS Word]", "presentation software skills [Power Point]", "internet search skills", "medical database search skills", "spreadsheet software skills [Excel]" and "advanced e-mail management skills" were in "substantial" need of improvement among the majority of settings and categories. All other computer literacy improvement elements were in "some" need of improvement. The overall outcome of this study indicates that physicians need further computer literacy improvements.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Self-Assessment , Educational Status , Cross-Sectional Studies , Medical Records Systems, Computerized , Informatics , Surveys and Questionnaires , Electronic Health Records
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