Looking Behind the Curtain: Identifying Factors Contributing to Changes on Care Outcomes During a Large Commercial EHR Implementation.

Adoption Electronic Health Records Medical Informatics Applications Mixed-method Outcome Assessment

Journal

EGEMS (Washington, DC)
ISSN: 2327-9214
Titre abrégé: EGEMS (Wash DC)
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101629606

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
06 May 2019
Historique:
entrez: 24 5 2019
pubmed: 24 5 2019
medline: 24 5 2019
Statut: epublish

Résumé

To identify factors contributing to changes on quality, productivity, and safety outcomes during a large commercial electronic health record (EHR) implementation and to guide future research. We conducted a mixed-methods study assessing the impact of a commercial EHR implementation. The method consisted of a quantitative longitudinal evaluation followed by qualitative semi-structured, in-depth interviews with clinical employees from the same implementation. Fourteen interviews were recorded and transcribed. Three authors independently coded interview narratives and via consensus identified factors contributing to changes on 15 outcomes of quality, productivity, and safety. We identified 14 factors that potentially affected the outcomes previously monitored. Our findings demonstrate that several factors related to the implementation (e.g., incomplete data migration), partially related (e.g., intentional decrease in volume of work), and not related (e.g., health insurance changes) may affect outcomes in different ways. This is the first study to investigate factors contributing to changes on a broad set of quality, productivity, and safety outcomes during an EHR implementation guided by the results of a large longitudinal evaluation. The diversity of factors identified indicates that the need for organizational adaptation to take full advantage of new technologies is as important for health care as it is for other services sectors. We recommend continuous identification and monitoring of these factors in future evaluations to hopefully increase our understanding of the full impact of health information technology interventions.

Identifiants

pubmed: 31119184
doi: 10.5334/egems.269
pmc: PMC6509951
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

21

Subventions

Organisme : NCATS NIH HHS
ID : UL1 TR001067
Pays : United States

Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts

The authors have no competing interests to declare.

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Auteurs

Tiago K Colicchio (TK)

University of Alabama at Birmingham, US.

Damian Borbolla (D)

University of Utah, US.

Vanessa D Colicchio (VD)

University of Utah, US.

Debra L Scammon (DL)

University of Utah, US.

Guilherme Del Fiol (G)

University of Utah, US.

Julio C Facelli (JC)

University of Utah, US.

Watson A Bowes (WA)

University of Utah, US.
Intermountain Healthcare, US.

Scott P Narus (SP)

University of Utah, US.
Intermountain Healthcare, US.

Classifications MeSH