Events Calendar

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AACP Annual Meeting
2015-07-11 - 2015-07-15    
All Day
The AACP Annual Meeting is the largest gathering of academic pharmacy administrators, faculty and staff, and each year offers 70 or more educational programs that cut across [...]
Engage, Innovation in Patient Engagement
2015-07-14 - 2015-07-15    
All Day
MedCity ENGAGE is an executive-level event where the industry’s brightest minds and leading organizations discuss best-in-class approaches to advance patient engagement and healthcare delivery. ENGAGE is the [...]
mHealth + Telehealth World 2015
2015-07-20 - 2015-07-22    
All Day
The role of technology in health care is growing year after year. Join us at mHealth + Telehealth World 2015 to learn strategies to keep [...]
2015 OSEHRA Open Source Summit
2015-07-29 - 2015-07-31    
All Day
Join the Premier Open Source Health IT Summit! Looking to gain expertise in both public and private sector open source health IT?  Want to collaborate [...]
Events on 2015-07-11
AACP Annual Meeting
11 Jul 15
National Harbor, Maryland
Events on 2015-07-14
Events on 2015-07-20
Events on 2015-07-29
2015 OSEHRA Open Source Summit
29 Jul 15
Bethesda
Articles

Study: No outlet has a lock on EHR ease of use

ehr ease of use

Electronic health record vendors need to improve the usability of their products and provide more guidance to their provider clients, according to a new study by Orem, Utah, research firm KLAS.

In its study of 128 physician leaders, KLAS found that no vendor scored above a four (on a scale from one to five) in clinical usability. Epic scored the highest at four, while Cerner and Siemens each came in at 3.7. Allscripts scored a 3.5, with McKesson Paragon at 3.4 and MEDITECH v. 6 at 3.

The study also found that providers want their vendors to expend more effort to make their EHRs more usable. Most providers, 86 percent, made moderate to extensive efforts to configure their EHR systems to improve usability. Epic clients reported the least amount of effort needed and the best capability at the “go live” stage; it also scored the highest with regard to effectiveness in guiding providers. Cerner and Epic were labeled as “best poised” to support “deep clinical usage.”

The report also determined that of various medical specialties, surgery found EHR systems to be significantly less usable than the norm, followed by oncology, ICU and orthopedics.

“[T]here is more to usability than just how many mouse clicks a task takes,” report author Colin Buckley said, according to a KLAS announcement.

This is not the first time that vendors have been called to task for selling EHRs that are difficult to use. Providers have been long been hampered by problems in using their EHR systems, causing frustration and slowing government efforts to transition the industry to EHRs.