Characterizing physician EHR use with vendor derived data: a feasibility study and cross-sectional analysis

Abstract Objective To derive 7 proposed core electronic health record (EHR) use metrics across 2 healthcare systems with different EHR vendor product installations and examine factors associated with EHR time. Materials and Methods A cross-sectional analysis of ambulatory physicians EHR use across t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association : JAMIA 2021-07, Vol.28 (7), p.1383-1392
Hauptverfasser: Melnick, Edward R, Ong, Shawn Y, Fong, Allan, Socrates, Vimig, Ratwani, Raj M, Nath, Bidisha, Simonov, Michael, Salgia, Anup, Williams, Brian, Marchalik, Daniel, Goldstein, Richard, Sinsky, Christine A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Objective To derive 7 proposed core electronic health record (EHR) use metrics across 2 healthcare systems with different EHR vendor product installations and examine factors associated with EHR time. Materials and Methods A cross-sectional analysis of ambulatory physicians EHR use across the Yale-New Haven and MedStar Health systems was performed for August 2019 using 7 proposed core EHR use metrics normalized to 8 hours of patient scheduled time. Results Five out of 7 proposed metrics could be measured in a population of nonteaching, exclusively ambulatory physicians. Among 573 physicians (Yale-New Haven N = 290, MedStar N = 283) in the analysis, median EHR-Time8 was 5.23 hours. Gender, additional clinical hours scheduled, and certain medical specialties were associated with EHR-Time8 after adjusting for age and health system on multivariable analysis. For every 8 hours of scheduled patient time, the model predicted these differences in EHR time (P 
ISSN:1527-974X
1067-5027
1527-974X
DOI:10.1093/jamia/ocab011