Impact of a problem-oriented view on clinical data retrieval

The electronic health record (EHR) data deluge makes data retrieval more difficult, escalating cognitive load and exacerbating clinician burnout. New auto-summarization techniques are needed. The study goal was to determine if problem-oriented view (POV) auto-summaries improve data retrieval workflo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association : JAMIA 2021-04, Vol.28 (5), p.899-906
Hauptverfasser: Semanik, Michael G, Kleinschmidt, Peter C, Wright, Adam, Willett, Duwayne L, Dean, Shannon M, Saleh, Sameh N, Co, Zoe, Sampene, Emmanuel, Buchanan, Joel R
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The electronic health record (EHR) data deluge makes data retrieval more difficult, escalating cognitive load and exacerbating clinician burnout. New auto-summarization techniques are needed. The study goal was to determine if problem-oriented view (POV) auto-summaries improve data retrieval workflows. We hypothesized that POV users would perform tasks faster, make fewer errors, be more satisfied with EHR use, and experience less cognitive load as compared with users of the standard view (SV). Simple data retrieval tasks were performed in an EHR simulation environment. A randomized block design was used. In the control group (SV), subjects retrieved lab results and medications by navigating to corresponding sections of the electronic record. In the intervention group (POV), subjects clicked on the name of the problem and immediately saw lab results and medications relevant to that problem. With POV, mean completion time was faster (173 seconds for POV vs 205 seconds for SV; P 
ISSN:1527-974X
1067-5027
1527-974X
DOI:10.1093/jamia/ocaa332