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1.
J Am Med Inform Assoc ; 25(8): 1054-1063, 2018 08 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29788287

ABSTRACT

Objective: The installation of EHR systems can disrupt operations at clinical practice sites, but also lead to improvements in information availability. We examined how the installation of an ambulatory EHR at OB/GYN practices and its subsequent interface with an inpatient perinatal EHR affected providers' satisfaction with the transmission of clinical information and patients' ratings of their care experience. Methods: We collected data on provider satisfaction through 4 survey rounds during the phased implementation of the EHR. Data on patient satisfaction were drawn from Press Ganey surveys issued by the healthcare network through a standard process. Using multivariable models, we determined how provider satisfaction with information transmission and patient satisfaction with their care experience changed as the EHR system allowed greater information flow between OB/GYN practices and the hospital. Results: Outpatient OB/GYN providers became more satisfied with their access to information from the inpatient perinatal triage unit once system capabilities included automatic data flow from triage back to the OB/GYN offices. Yet physicians were generally less satisfied with how the EHR affected their work processes than other clinical and non-clinical staff. Patient satisfaction dropped after initial EHR installation, and we find no evidence of increased satisfaction linked to system integration. Conclusions: Dissatisfaction of providers with an EHR system and difficulties incorporating EHR technology into patient care may negatively impact patient satisfaction. Care must be taken during EHR implementations to maintain good communication with patients while satisfying documentation requirements.


Subject(s)
Ambulatory Care Information Systems , Attitude of Health Personnel , Attitude to Computers , Hospital Information Systems , Medical Records Systems, Computerized , Patient Satisfaction , Systems Integration , Female , Health Care Surveys , Health Information Interoperability , Humans , Obstetrics , Obstetrics and Gynecology Department, Hospital , Perinatology , Pregnancy
2.
J Am Med Inform Assoc ; 24(e1): e87-e94, 2017 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27539200

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To determine the effect of availability of clinical information from an integrated electronic health record system on pregnancy outcomes at the point of care. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We used provider interviews and surveys to evaluate the availability of pregnancy-related clinical information in ambulatory practices and the hospital, and applied multiple regression to determine whether greater clinical information availability is associated with improvements in pregnancy outcomes and changes in care processes. Our regression models are risk adjusted and include physician fixed effects to control for unobservable characteristics of physicians that are constant across patients and time. RESULTS: Making nonstress test results, blood pressure data, antenatal problem lists, and tubal sterilization requests from office records available to hospital-based providers is significantly associated with reductions in the likelihood of obstetric trauma and other adverse pregnancy outcomes. Better access to prenatal records also increases the probability of labor induction and decreases the probability of Cesarean section (C-section). Availability of lab test results and new diagnoses generated in the hospital at ambulatory offices is associated with fewer preterm births and low-birth-weight babies. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS: Increased availability of specific clinical information enables providers to deliver better care and improve outcomes, but some types of clinical data are more important than others. More available information does not always result from automated integration of electronic records, but rather from the availability of the source records. Providers depend upon information that they trust to be reliable, complete, consistent, and easily retrievable, even if this requires multiple interfaces.


Subject(s)
Cesarean Section/statistics & numerical data , Electronic Health Records , Information Dissemination , Pregnancy Outcome , Prenatal Care/organization & administration , Clinical Laboratory Techniques , Female , Humans , Infant, Low Birth Weight , Infant, Newborn , Infant, Premature , Labor, Induced/statistics & numerical data , Pregnancy , Triage
3.
Int J Med Inform ; 84(9): 683-93, 2015 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26045022

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The increase in electronic health record implementation in all treatment venues has led to greater demands for integration within and across practice settings with different work cultures. We study the evolution of coordination processes when integrating ambulatory-specific electronic health records with hospital systems. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Longitudinal qualitative study using semi-structured interviews and archival documentation throughout a 5-year implementation and integration of obstetrical ambulatory and hospital records with a goal of achieving a perinatal continuum of care. RESULTS: As users implement and integrate electronic health records, there is an evolution in their focus from technology acceptance to structural adaptation to coordination. The users' perspective on standardization evolves from initial concern about the unintended consequences of standardization to recognition of its importance and then finally to more active acceptance. The system itself cannot drive all reengineering; the organization must impose specific work process changes and as the user's perspective evolves, more individually adapted and aligned change will occur. Computer integration alone does not result in coordination; users must value integrated information and incorporate this information within their workflows. DISCUSSION: Users initially view electronic health records as a documentation tool, but over time they come to recognize the benefits of the system for clinical information retrieval, and finally, for care coordination after the integrated information provided through electronic health records becomes more complete, accessible and adapted to meet user needs. As this occurs, coordination mechanisms move beyond pooled standardization through sequential plans coordinated by the organization to reciprocal mutual adjustments for clinical decision making by individuals. Trust in the information source, not software interoperability, is critical for information sharing. CONCLUSIONS: Organizations implementing commercial electronic health records cannot simply assume that reciprocal coordination will immediately occur. It takes time for users to adjust, and enculturate coordination goals, during which time there are adaptive structurations that require organizational response, and changes in mechanisms for achieving coordination.


Subject(s)
Ambulatory Care , Delivery of Health Care, Integrated , Electronic Health Records/organization & administration , Medical Records Systems, Computerized/standards , Private Sector , Humans , Information Dissemination , Information Storage and Retrieval , Longitudinal Studies , Models, Theoretical , Qualitative Research , Software
4.
BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ; 13: 43, 2013 Apr 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23566021

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: We describe and evaluate the development and use of a Clinical Decision Support (CDS) intervention; an alert, in response to an identified medical error of overuse of a diagnostic laboratory test in a Computerized Physician Order Entry (CPOE) system. CPOE with embedded CDS has been shown to improve quality of care and reduce medical errors. CPOE can also improve resource utilization through more appropriate use of laboratory tests and diagnostic studies. Observational studies are necessary in order to understand how these technologies can be successfully employed by healthcare providers. METHODS: The error was identified by the Test Utilization Committee (TUC) in September, 2008 when they noticed critical care patients were being tested daily, and sometimes twice daily, for B-Type Natriuretic Peptide (BNP). Repeat and/or serial BNP testing is inappropriate for guiding the management of heart failure and may be clinically misleading. The CDS intervention consists of an expert rule that searches the system for a BNP lab value on the patient. If there is a value and the value is within the current hospital stay, an advisory is displayed to the ordering clinician. In order to isolate the impact of this intervention on unnecessary BNP testing we applied multiple regression analysis to the sample of 41,306 patient admissions with at least one BNP test at LVHN between January, 2008 and September, 2011. RESULTS: Our regression results suggest the CDS intervention reduced BNP orders by 21% relative to the mean. The financial impact of the rule was also significant. Multiplying by the direct supply cost of $28.04 per test, the intervention saved approximately $92,000 per year. CONCLUSIONS: The use of alerts has great positive potential to improve care, but should be used judiciously and in the appropriate environment. While these savings may not be generalizable to other interventions, the experience at LVHN suggests that appropriately designed and carefully implemented CDS interventions can have a substantial impact on the efficiency of care provision.


Subject(s)
Decision Support Systems, Clinical , Diagnostic Techniques and Procedures/standards , Health Services Misuse/prevention & control , Medical Order Entry Systems , Humans , Regression Analysis , Utilization Review
5.
J Gen Intern Med ; 27(2): 213-9, 2012 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21789717

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Differential diagnosis (DDX) generators are computer programs that generate a DDX based on various clinical data. OBJECTIVE: We identified evaluation criteria through consensus, applied these criteria to describe the features of DDX generators, and tested performance using cases from the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM©) and the Medical Knowledge Self Assessment Program (MKSAP©). METHODS: We first identified evaluation criteria by consensus. Then we performed Google® and Pubmed searches to identify DDX generators. To be included, DDX generators had to do the following: generate a list of potential diagnoses rather than text or article references; rank or indicate critical diagnoses that need to be considered or eliminated; accept at least two signs, symptoms or disease characteristics; provide the ability to compare the clinical presentations of diagnoses; and provide diagnoses in general medicine. The evaluation criteria were then applied to the included DDX generators. Lastly, the performance of the DDX generators was tested with findings from 20 test cases. Each case performance was scored one through five, with a score of five indicating presence of the exact diagnosis. Mean scores and confidence intervals were calculated. KEY RESULTS: Twenty three programs were initially identified and four met the inclusion criteria. These four programs were evaluated using the consensus criteria, which included the following: input method; mobile access; filtering and refinement; lab values, medications, and geography as diagnostic factors; evidence based medicine (EBM) content; references; and drug information content source. The mean scores (95% Confidence Interval) from performance testing on a five-point scale were Isabel© 3.45 (2.53, 4.37), DxPlain® 3.45 (2.63-4.27), Diagnosis Pro® 2.65 (1.75-3.55) and PEPID™ 1.70 (0.71-2.69). The number of exact matches paralleled the mean score finding. CONCLUSIONS: Consensus criteria for DDX generator evaluation were developed. Application of these criteria as well as performance testing supports the use of DxPlain® and Isabel© over the other currently available DDX generators.


Subject(s)
Evidence-Based Medicine/standards , Software/standards , Diagnosis, Differential , Evidence-Based Medicine/methods , Humans
6.
J Healthc Inf Manag ; 24(2): 41-4, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20397333

ABSTRACT

Implementing an EMR in an ambulatory practice requires intense workflow analysis, introduction of new technologies and significant cultural change for the physicians and physician champion. This paper will relate the experience at Lehigh Valley Health Network in the implementation of an ambulatory EMR and with the physician champions that were selected to assist the effort. The choice of a physician champion involves political considerations, variation in leadership and communication styles, and a cornucopia of personalities. Physician leadership has been shown to be a critical success factor for any successful technology implementation. An effective physician champion can help develop and promote a clear vision of an improved future, enlist the support of the physicians and staff, drive the process changes needs and manage the cultural change required. The experience with various types of physician champions will be discussed, including, the "reluctant leader", the "techie leader", the "whiny leader", and the "mature leader". Experiences with each type have resulted in a valuable, "lessons learned" summary. LVHN is a tertiary academic community medical center consisting of 950 beds and over 450 employed physicians. LVHN has been named to the Health and Hospital Network's 100 Top Wired and 25 Most Wireless Hospitals.


Subject(s)
Ambulatory Care Information Systems , Attitude to Computers , Diffusion of Innovation , Medical Records Systems, Computerized , Physicians/psychology , Humans , Leadership , Organizational Case Studies , United States
7.
J Healthc Inf Manag ; 19(1): 70-5, 2005.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15682679

ABSTRACT

Community hospitals served by predominately private-practice physicians face difficult challenges in implementing computerized provider order entry (CPOE), but there are techniques and incentives that can be employed to change physician behavior Various techniques were used to increase CPOE utilization at Lehigh Valley Hospital, a three-campus, 750-bed tertiary community hospital in eastern Pennsylvania. Those techniques included presenting studies supporting CPOE as a way to improve patient care, recognizing support with small trinkets, providing individual access to computers, adding clinical decision support, and bringing peer pressure to bear Ultimately, financial compensation for the educational time required to learn to use and become proficient with the system was employed and had the greatest impact on behavior Measuring utilization of the CPOE system with data extracted from the hospital's clinical information system, CPOE utilization by physicians increased to 57 percent from 35 percent after a financial compensation program was initiated. Utilization declined to 42 percent several months after completing the first phase of the program and increased to 54 percent after a second phase was initiated.


Subject(s)
Attitude to Computers , Medical Records Systems, Computerized/statistics & numerical data , Practice Patterns, Physicians' , Humans , Medical Errors/prevention & control , Motivation , Organizational Innovation , Pennsylvania
8.
Physician Exec ; 29(6): 48-52, 2003.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14686245

ABSTRACT

A prominent hospital in Pennsylvania turned to CPOE to help reduce medical errors and improve patient care. Learn what steps hospital officials took to establish a successful CPOE system.


Subject(s)
Decision Support Systems, Clinical , Medical Errors/prevention & control , Medical Records Systems, Computerized , Cost Savings , Financial Management, Hospital , Humans , Inservice Training , Leadership , United States
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