某学术医疗中心眼科电子健康档案实施评估(美国眼科学会论文)。

Michael F Chiang, Sarah Read-Brown, Daniel C Tu, Dongseok Choi, David S Sanders, Thomas S Hwang, Steven Bailey, Daniel J Karr, Elizabeth Cottle, John C Morrison, David J Wilson, Thomas R Yackel
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:评估与电子健康记录(EHR)实施相关的三个措施:临床数量、时间要求和临床文件的性质。与基准纸质文档进行比较。方法:2006年某学术眼科实施电子病历。研究人群定义为在实施前后工作5个月的教师提供者。从电子病历报告系统中收集临床数量以及每位患者就诊的时间长度。为了直接比较时间需求,两位同时使用纸质和EHR系统的教师完成了时间运动日志,记录了患者数量、门诊时间和非门诊时间,以完成文档。研究人员查询了院系提供者和数据库,以确定同时包含纸质和电子病历记录的患者记录,并从中确定了三个病例,以说明具有代表性的文献差异。结果:23名教师在3年的研究期间完成了120,490次临床接触。与实施前3个月的基线临床量相比,实施后的量在第1季度为88%,第1年为93%,第2年为97%,第3年为97%。在所有接触中,75%在开始记录后的1.7天内完成。使用电子病历的每位患者平均总时间比使用纸质病历的患者长6.8分钟(结论:电子病历的实施增加了记录时间,很少或没有增加临床量,并改变了眼科记录的性质。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Evaluation of electronic health record implementation in ophthalmology at an academic medical center (an American Ophthalmological Society thesis).

Purpose: To evaluate three measures related to electronic health record (EHR) implementation: clinical volume, time requirements, and nature of clinical documentation. Comparison is made to baseline paper documentation.

Methods: An academic ophthalmology department implemented an EHR in 2006. A study population was defined of faculty providers who worked the 5 months before and after implementation. Clinical volumes, as well as time length for each patient encounter, were collected from the EHR reporting system. To directly compare time requirements, two faculty providers who utilized both paper and EHR systems completed time-motion logs to record the number of patients, clinic time, and nonclinic time to complete documentation. Faculty providers and databases were queried to identify patient records containing both paper and EHR notes, from which three cases were identified to illustrate representative documentation differences.

Results: Twenty-three faculty providers completed 120,490 clinical encounters during a 3-year study period. Compared to baseline clinical volume from 3 months pre-implementation, the post-implementation volume was 88% in quarter 1, 93% in year 1, 97% in year 2, and 97% in year 3. Among all encounters, 75% were completed within 1.7 days after beginning documentation. The mean total time per patient was 6.8 minutes longer with EHR than paper (P<.01). EHR documentation involved greater reliance on textual interpretation of clinical findings, whereas paper notes used more graphical representations, and EHR notes were longer and included automatically generated text.

Conclusion: This EHR implementation was associated with increased documentation time, little or no increase in clinical volume, and changes in the nature of ophthalmic documentation.

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