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DEVICE TALKS
DEVICE TALKS BOSTON 2018: BIGGER AND BETTER THAN EVER! Join us Oct. 8-10 for the 7th annual DeviceTalks Boston, back in the city where it [...]
6th Annual HealthIMPACT Midwest
2018-10-10    
All Day
REV1 VENTURES COLUMBUS, OH The Provider-Patient Experience Summit - Disrupting Delivery without Disrupting Care HealthIMPACT Midwest is focused on technologies impacting clinician satisfaction and performance. [...]
15 Oct
2018-10-15 - 2018-10-16    
All Day
Conference Series Ltd invites all the participants from all over the world to attend “3rd International Conference on Environmental Health” during October 15-16, 2018 in Warsaw, Poland which includes prompt keynote [...]
17 Oct
2018-10-17 - 2018-10-19    
7:00 am - 6:00 pm
BALANCING TECHNOLOGY AND THE HUMAN ELEMENT In an era when digital technologies enable individuals to track health statistics such as daily activity and vital signs, [...]
Epigenetics Congress 2018
2018-10-25 - 2018-10-26    
All Day
Conference: 5th World Congress on Epigenetics and Chromosome Date: October 25-26, 2018 Place: Istanbul, Turkey Email: epigeneticscongress@gmail.com About Conference: Epigenetics congress 2018 invites all the [...]
Events on 2018-10-08
DEVICE TALKS
8 Oct 18
425 Summer Street
Events on 2018-10-10
Events on 2018-10-17
17 Oct
Events on 2018-10-25
Epigenetics Congress 2018
25 Oct 18
Istanbul
Articles

Oct 18: Provider workflow suffers after poor EHR implementation process

ipatientcare

While one intention of electronic health record implementation is to improve provider workflow, that was hardly the case for pair of southern California hospitals, Medscape Medical News reported.

In fact, EHR implementation had the exact opposite effect for residents at both Riverside County Regional Medical Center in Moreno, Calif., and Pomona Valley Hospital Medical Center in Pomona, Calif.; it increased the average time of residents for seeing patients and charting the visits from 21 minutes to 37 minutes.

“Some of us were really excited. We thought it would improve patient care,” Maisara Rahman, M.D., who helps to train family-medicine residents at Riverside County, said during a talk at the American Academy of Family Physicians’ annual meeting in San Diego in September, according to Medscape. “But when implementation started, we saw inefficiencies.”

Rahman said the workflow issues became so bad that residents who were supposed to be attending her lectures instead were skipping out to give themselves more time to document patient encounters in the hospital’s EHR. She blamed the charting issues on several factors, including use of old software that required users to jump from screen to screen to write basic notes, a slow server and poor training.

Seven of 10 residents at Riverside received less than five hours of training, according to Rahman, who said that–not coincidentally–the same number of residents reported receiving subpar training.

Research published from the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in April in the Journal of General Internal Medicine concluded that doctors spend too much time behind computers, and not enough time at their patients’ bedsides. The researchers said they thought that better-designed electronic health record systems could help reduce time looking for patient histories.

Meanwhile, a study of leaders at the Department of Veterans Affairs published in April in the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association concluded that the “next generation” of EHR systems needs to improve integration of information and space, and must move beyond the concept of serving simply as computerized paper charts.In June, registered nurses at Affinity Medical Center in Massillon, Ohio called for a delay on the go-live of their hospital’s EHR system, citing insufficient training.

 

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