卫生信息交流。

William Hersh, Annette Totten, Karen Eden, Beth Devine, Paul Gorman, Steve Kassakian, Susan S Woods, Monica Daeges, Miranda Pappas, Marian S McDonagh
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引用次数: 22

摘要

目的:本综述试图系统地回顾现有的关于卫生信息交换(HIE)的文献,即跨卫生保健组织边界的临床信息的电子共享。HIE作为一项重要的医学技术应用,可以提高医疗服务的效率、成本效益、质量和安全性。然而,HIE也需要赞助商的大量投资,赞助商包括政府和卫生保健组织。这篇综述的目的是综合目前已有的关于HIE有效性、使用、可用性、障碍和促进实际使用、实施和可持续性的研究,并将这些信息作为未来实施、扩展和研究的基础。数据来源:研究馆员设计并进行电子数据库的检索,包括MEDLINE®(1990年至2015年2月)、PsycINFO®(1990年至2015年2月)、CINAHL®(1990年至2015年2月)、Cochrane中央对照试验注册库(至2015年1月)、Cochrane系统评价数据库(至2015年1月)、效果评价摘要数据库(至2015年第一季度)、国家卫生科学经济评估数据库(截至2015年第一季度)。通过查阅未被检索数据库索引的期刊的参考文献列表和目录来补充检索。综述方法:两位研究者根据预先确定的标准对摘要和选定的全文文章进行综述。差异通过讨论和协商一致解决,根据需要由第三位研究者做出最终决定。数据由一人从每篇纳入的文章中提取,并由另一人进行验证。所有的分析都是定性的,并根据主题进行定制。结果:我们总共纳入了136项研究,其中34项关于有效性,其中26项报告了中等临床、经济或患者结果,8项报告了HIE的临床认知。我们还发现了58项关于HIE使用的研究,22项关于可用性和其他促进因素和实际使用HIE的障碍,45项关于促进因素或实施HIE的障碍,17项关于与HIE可持续性相关的因素。没有关于HIE有效性的研究报告对主要临床结果(如死亡率和发病率)的影响或确定的危害。低质量证据在一定程度上支持HIE在以下方面的价值:减少重复的实验室和放射学检查订单、降低急诊科成本、减少住院人数(再入院人数较少)、改善公共卫生报告、提高门诊护理质量和改善残疾索赔处理。在临床医生对HIE的看法的研究中,大多数应答者认为HIE带来了积极的变化,例如在协调、沟通和对患者的了解方面的改善。然而,在一项研究中,临床医生报告说,HIE并没有节省时间,也可能不值得花费。对HIE使用的研究发现,随着时间的推移,HIE的采用有所增加,2014年76%的美国医院交换信息,自2008年以来增长了85%,自2013年以来增长了23%。2012年,38%的办公室医生使用HIE系统,而长期护理提供者的使用率仍然很低,不到1%。在使用HIE的组织中,使用HIE的用户数量或访问次数通常很低。HIE的可用性程度与使用率的增加有关,但与有效性结果无关。最常见的使用HIE的障碍是缺乏临界质量的电子交换数据、低效的工作流程、设计糟糕的界面和更新功能。信息不足以让我们通过HIE功能或架构来评估可用性。研究提供了关于影响执行和可持续性的外部环境和内部组织特征的资料。HIE组织的一般特征(例如,强有力的领导)或HIE系统的特定特征是最常被引用的促进因素,而竞争或缺乏HIE商业案例等不利因素是最常被确定的障碍。局限性:与HIE的实际用途和能力相比,确定的研究范围有限。例如,测量的结果以及测量和分析的方法是有限和狭义的;在大多数有效性研究中,潜在混杂因素的问题没有得到解决,危害也没有得到充分的研究。研究设计、结果、HIE类型和研究环境存在高度异质性,限制了综合证据的能力;无法进行定量分析。 这一证据基础的适用性是不确定的,因为所研究的HIE系统是如此多样化,而且许多现有的系统并没有对这一领域的研究做出贡献。结论:HIE对临床结果和潜在危害的全面影响尚未得到充分研究,尽管有证据支持在减少某些特定资源的使用和改善护理质量方面的益处。随着时间的推移,HIE的使用有所增加,在医院使用率最高,在长期护理机构使用率最低。然而,在提供HIE的组织中,它的使用率仍然很低。使用HIE的障碍包括缺乏参与交换的临界质量、低效的工作流程以及设计不良的界面和更新功能。研究已经确定了实施和可持续性的许多促进因素和障碍,但这些研究没有对其影响进行排名或比较。为了提高我们对HIE的理解,未来的研究需要解决全面的问题,使用更严格的设计,使用描述HIE类型的标准,并成为研究HIE的协调系统方法的一部分。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Health Information Exchange.

Objectives: This review sought to systematically review the available literature on health information exchange (HIE), the electronic sharing of clinical information across the boundaries of health care organizations. HIE has been promoted as an important application of technology in medicine that can improve the efficiency, cost-effectiveness, quality, and safety of health care delivery. However, HIE also requires considerable investment by sponsors, which have included governments as well as health care organizations. This review aims to synthesize the currently available research addressing HIE effectiveness, use, usability, barriers and facilitators to actual use, implementation, and sustainability, and to present this information as a foundation on which future implementation, expansion, and research can be based.

Data sources: A research librarian designed and conducted searches of electronic databases, including MEDLINE® (1990 to February 2015), PsycINFO® (1990 to February 2015), CINAHL® (1990 through February 2015), the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (through January 2015), the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (through January 2015), the Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects (through the first quarter of 2015), and the National Health Sciences Economic Evaluation Database (through the first quarter of 2015). The searches were supplemented by reviewing reference lists and the table of contents of journals not indexed in the databases we searched.

Review methods: Two investigators reviewed abstracts and the selected full-text articles for inclusion based on predefined criteria. Discrepancies were resolved through discussion and consensus, with a third investigator making the final decision as needed. Data were abstracted from each included article by one person and verified by another. All analyses were qualitative, and they were customized according to the topic.

Results: We included 136 studies overall, with 34 on effectiveness, 26 of which reported intermediate clinical, economic, or patient outcomes, and 8 that reported on clinical perceptions of HIE. We also found 58 studies on the use of HIE, 22 on usability and other facilitators and barriers to actual use of HIE, 45 on facilitators or barriers to HIE implementation, and 17 on factors related to sustainability of HIE.

No studies of HIE effectiveness reported impact on primary clinical outcomes (e.g., mortality and morbidity) or identified harms. Low-quality evidence somewhat supports the value of HIE for reducing duplicative laboratory and radiology test ordering, lowering emergency department costs, reducing hospital admissions (less so for readmissions), improving public health reporting, increasing ambulatory quality of care, and improving disability claims processing. In studies of clinician perceptions of HIE, most respondents attributed positive changes to HIE, such as improvements in coordination, communication, and knowledge about the patient. However in one study clinicians reported that the HIE did not save time and may not be worth the cost.

Studies of HIE use found that HIE adoption has increased over time, with 76 percent of U.S. hospitals exchanging information in 2014, an 85-percent increase since 2008 and a 23-percent increase since 2013. HIE systems were used by 38 percent of office-based physicians in 2012, while use remains low, less than 1 percent, among long-term care providers.

Within organizations with HIE, the number of users or the number of visits in which the HIE was used was generally very low. The degree of usability of an HIE was associated with increased rates of use but was not associated with effectiveness outcomes. The most commonly cited barriers to HIE use were lack of critical mass electronically exchanging data, inefficient workflow, and poorly designed interface and update features. Information was insufficient to allow us to assess usability by HIE function or architecture.

Studies provided information on both external environmental and internal organizational characteristics that affect implementation and sustainability. General characteristics of the HIE organization (e.g., strong leadership) or specific characteristics of the HIE system were the most frequently cited facilitators, while disincentives such as competition or lack of a business case for HIE were the most frequently identified barriers.

Limitations: The scope of studies identified was limited compared with the actual uses and capabilities of HIE. The outcomes measured and methods of measurement and analysis, for example, were limited and narrowly defined; the issue of potential confounders was not addressed in most studies of effectiveness, and harms were not adequately studied. There was a high degree of heterogeneity in study designs, outcomes, HIE types, and settings across the studies, limiting the ability to synthesize the evidence; no quantitative analyses were possible. The applicability of this evidence base is uncertain because the HIE systems studied were so diverse, and many in existence have not contributed to research in this field.

Conclusions: The full impact of HIE on clinical outcomes and potential harms is inadequately studied, although evidence provides some support for benefit in reducing use of some specific resources and achieving improvements in quality-of-care measures. Use of HIE has risen over time, and is highest in hospitals and lowest in long-term care settings. However, use of HIE within organizations that offer it is still low. Barriers to HIE use include lack of critical mass participating in the exchange, inefficient workflow, and poorly designed interface and update features. Studies have identified numerous facilitators and barriers to implementation and sustainability, but the studies have not ranked or compared their impact. To advance our understanding of HIE, future studies need to address comprehensive questions, use more rigorous designs, use a standard for describing types of HIE, and be part of a coordinated systematic approach to studying HIE.

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