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Psychiatry and Psychological Disorders
2021-02-08 - 2021-02-09    
All Day
Mental health Summit 2021 is a meeting of Psychiatrist for emerging their perspective against mental health challenges and psychological disorders in upcoming future. Psychiatry is [...]
Nanotechnology and Materials Engineering
2021-02-10 - 2021-02-11    
All Day
Nanotechnology and Materials Engineering are forthcoming use in healthcare, electronics, cosmetics, and other areas. Nanomaterials are the elements with the finest measurement of size 10-9 [...]
Dementia, Alzheimers and Neurological Disorders
2021-02-10 - 2021-02-11    
All Day
Euro Dementia 2021 is a distinctive forum to assemble worldwide distinguished academics within the field of professionals, Psychology, academic scientists, professors to exchange their ideas [...]
Neurology and Neurosurgery 2021
2021-02-10 - 2021-02-11    
All Day
European Neurosurgery 2021 anticipates participants from all around the globe to experience thought provoking Keynote lectures, oral, video & poster presentations. This Neurology meeting will [...]
Biofuels and Bioenergy 2021
2021-02-15 - 2021-02-16    
All Day
Biofuels and Bioenergy biofuel is a fuel that is produced through contemporary biological processes, such as agriculture and anaerobic digestion, rather than a fuel produced [...]
Tropical Medicine and Infectious Diseases
2021-02-15 - 2021-02-16    
All Day
Tropical Disease Webinar committee members invite all the participants across the globe to take part in this conference covering the theme “Global Impact on infectious [...]
Infectious Diseases 2021
2021-02-15 - 2021-02-16    
All Day
Infection Congress 2021 is intended to honor prestigious award for talented Young Researchers, Scientists, Young Investigators, Post-Graduate Students, Post-Doctoral Fellows, Trainees in recognition of their [...]
Gastroenterology and Liver Diseases
2021-02-18 - 2021-02-19    
All Day
Gastroenterology and Liver Diseases Conference 2021 provides a chance for all the stakeholders to collect all the Researchers, principal investigators, experts and researchers working under [...]
World Kidney Congress 2021
2021-02-18    
All Day
Kidney Meet 2021 will be the best platform for exchanging new ideas and research. It’s a virtual event that will grab the attendee’s attention to [...]
Agriculture & Organic farming
2021-02-22 - 2021-02-23    
All Day
                                                  [...]
Aquaculture & Fisheries
2021-02-22 - 2021-02-23    
All Day
We take the pleasure to invite all the Scientist, researchers, students and delegates to Participate in the Webinar on 13th World Congress on Aquaculture & [...]
Nanoscience and Nanotechnology 2021
2021-02-22 - 2021-02-23    
All Day
Conference Series warmly invites all the participants across the globe to attend "5th Annual Meet on Nanoscience and Nanotechnology” dated on February 22-23, 2021 , [...]
Neurology, Psychiatric disorders and Mental health
2021-02-23 - 2021-02-24    
12:00 am
Neurology, Psychiatric disorders and Mental health Summit is an idiosyncratic discussion to bring the advanced approaches and also unite recognized scholastics, concerned with neurology, neuroscience, [...]
Food and Nutrition 2021
2021-02-24    
All Day
Nutri Food 2021 reunites the old and new faces in food research to scale-up many dedicated brains in research and the utilization of the works [...]
Psychiatry and Psychological Disorders
2021-02-24 - 2021-02-25    
All Day
Mental health Summit 2021 is a meeting of Psychiatrist for emerging their perspective against mental health challenges and psychological disorders in upcoming future. Psychiatry is [...]
International Conference on  Biochemistry and Glyco Science
2021-02-25 - 2021-02-26    
All Day
Our point is to urge researchers to spread their test and hypothetical outcomes in any case a lot of detail as could be ordinary. There [...]
Biomedical, Biopharma and Clinical Research
2021-02-25 - 2021-02-26    
All Day
Biomedical research 2021 provides a platform to enhance your knowledge and forecast future developments in biomedical, bio pharma and clinical research and strives to provide [...]
Parasitology & Infectious Diseases 2021
2021-02-25    
All Day
INFECTIOUS DISEASES CONGRESS 2021 on behalf of its Organizing Committee, assemble all the renowned Pathologists, Immunologists, Researchers, Cellular and Molecular Biologists, Immune therapists, Academicians, Biotechnologists, [...]
Tissue Science and Regenerative Medicine
2021-02-26 - 2021-02-27    
All Day
Tissue Science 2021 proudly invites contributors across the globe to attend “International Conference on Tissue Science and Regenerative Medicine” during February 26-27, 2021 (Webinar) which [...]
Infectious Diseases, Microbiology & Beneficial Microbes
2021-02-26 - 2021-02-27    
All Day
Infectious diseases are ultimately caused by microscopic organisms like bacteria, viruses, fungi or parasites where Microbiology is the investigation of these minute life forms. A [...]
Stress Management 2021
2021-02-26    
All Day
Stress Management Meet 2021 will be a great platform for exchanging new ideas and research. It’s an online event which will grab the attendee’s attention [...]
Heart Care and Diseases 2021
2021-03-03    
All Day
Euro Heart Conference 2020 will join world-class professors, scientists, researchers, students, Perfusionists, cardiologists to discuss methodology for ailment remediation for heart diseases, Electrocardiography, Heart Failure, [...]
Gastroenterology and Digestive Disorders
2021-03-04 - 2021-03-05    
All Day
Gastroenterology Diseases is clearing a worldwide stage by drawing in 2500+ Gastroenterologists, Hepatologists, Surgeons going from Researchers, Academicians and Business experts, who are working in [...]
Environmental Toxicology and Ecological Risk Assessment
2021-03-04 - 2021-03-05    
All Day
Environmental Toxicology 2021 you can meet the world leading toxicologists, biochemists, pharmacologists, and also the industry giants who will provide you with the modern inventions [...]
Dermatology, Cosmetology and Plastic Surgery
2021-03-05 - 2021-03-06    
All Day
Market Analysis Speaking Opportunities Speaking Opportunities: We are constantly intrigued by hearing from professionals/practitioners who want to share their direct encounters and contextual investigations with [...]
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Articles

EHRs Need More Bananas, Fewer Oranges, to Improve Care

medicare

Physicians are people, too, as it turns out.

Well of course they are, you say, perhaps while acknowledging that we may have expected doctors to perform superhuman feats since television feeds us a steady diet of doctors as boy geniuses, adult geniuses, other types of geniuses and personally troubled but ethically unassailable walking Greek tragedies.

In the real world, we know that doctors these days are engaged in very human struggles to pay off massive medical school bills, walk the gauntlet of residency and stave off the demons that come with a high-demand profession.

But where physicians arguably seem most like the rest of us is in terms of behavioral change. When doctors get something stuck in their brains, the evidence suggests, they have as much trouble getting it out as anyone else.

“We give antidepressants to children too often,” says the New York Times’ Aaron Carroll of a recent JAMA Pediatrics study. “We induce deliveries too early … We get X-rays of ankles looking for injuries we almost never find. And although there’s almost no evidence that hydrolyzed formulas do anything to prevent allergic or autoimmune disease, they’re still recommended in many guidelines.”

The fallout from a failure to change behavior when facts change is in many ways obvious. Unnecessary care costs money, driving up overall costs with nothing to show for the expense. It also skews the data in terms of efficacy, making it difficult to determine what works, why it works and how.

In some instances, the inability to purge flawed practices can be fatal.

Carroll references a 2001 study of tightly controlled blood glucose levels among ICU patients that suggested fewer adverse outcomes and led to calls for changes in treatment. The limited study led to a larger project in 2009 that contradicted the earlier effort, after which doctors were asked to cease the practice of tight glycemic control.

Because studies beget studies, a 2015 project looked back at how physician behavior had changed between the 2001 and 2009 efforts, and then after 2009 when physicians were advised to stop tight glycemic control. Researchers found a steady climb in the use of tight glycemic control from 2001 through 2015 even though the prevailing wisdom had changed.

As Atul Guwande illustrated when he wrote The Checklist Manifesto, change is both simple and difficult. The solutions, a basic checklist, are simple; getting people to use them regularly is the hard part. But the results cannot be disputed.

So behavioral change is possible, even for doctors, but not without a system of proper incentives.

For that, we look to fruit. It turns out that when a company offers employees fruit in the mornings as a healthy breakfast option, the bananas always go first and the oranges always remain after everything else is gone.

“It’s not that bananas are objectively more delicious than oranges,” write Tania Luna and Jordan Cohen in the Harvard Business Review. “The difference in their popularity comes down to one thing: how easy they are to peel.”

Another way to put it? Oranges cause more friction for the user and illustrate that the key to channeling behavior is reducing friction—making things easier, even if easier is a matter of 20 seconds difference.

Examples of the Banana Principle abound. One firm made it easier to identify new employees so the seasoned vets could approach and welcome them. Another reconfigured the office space to facilitate meetings and collaboration.

Of course, the Banana Principle also works in reverse; if you can encourage behavior by making some things easier, you can also discourage behavior by making certain behaviors harder or more imposing. To discourage meeting attendees from looking at their phones, one company put a box full of small toys and gadgets to play with in the middle of the conference room table. Sure, fiddling went through the roof, but it wasn’t anywhere near as problematic as everyone staring at the small screen in their hands.

How does this relate to healthcare? We’re at the point now where just about every clinical task goes through an electronic intermediary device. You want doctors to go through a checklist before they begin a procedure? Make it impossible for them to move forward without confirming each preparatory step. Want tight glycemic control to stop? Make it harder to do or easier to pursue an alternative.

I’m not suggesting that this is an easy, straightforward fix. Most EHRs these days include a host of clinical reminders that physicians automatically click through or simply ignore, if they can. Many of the tools we offer clinicians these days are as annoying as they are helpful. But we know how to change behavior and healthcare IT tools are ubiquitous, making better tools both an obligation and the most logical approach to changing the way things are done.

“The power of the Banana Principle lies in its simplicity and its silence,” write Luna and Cohen. “So, next time you are tempted to convince someone (or even yourself) to change a behavior, consider how you might change the friction level instead. Find ways to make the positive behaviors feel more like bananas and the negative behaviors feel more like oranges.”

The EHRs in use today include some bananas and also many oranges. But it’s the potential for getting to almost all bananas by applying the principles of disciplines like behavioral economics that’s exciting. Even if we’re only saving clinicians 20 seconds by driving them to one approach over another, the benefits in terms of reduced frustration, greater efficacy and better care will indeed be fruitful.

Irv Lichtenwald is president and CEO of  Medsphere Systems Corporation, the solution provider for the CareVue electronic health record.