Rouf Emran, Chumley Heidi S, Dobbie Alison E
Department of Family Medicine, University of Kansas School of Medicine, Kansas City, Kansas, USA.
BMC Med Educ. 2008 Mar 31;8:13. doi: 10.1186/1472-6920-8-13.
United States academic medical centers are increasingly incorporating electronic health records (EHR) into teaching settings. We report third year medical students' attitudes towards clinical learning using the electronic health record in ambulatory primary care clinics.
In academic year 2005-06, 60 third year students were invited to complete a questionnaire after finishing the required Ambulatory Medicine/Family Medicine clerkship. The authors elicited themes for the questionnaire by asking a focus group of third year students how using the EHR had impacted their learning. Five themes emerged: organization of information, access to online resources, prompts from the EHR, personal performance (charting and presenting), and communication with patients and preceptors. The authors added a sixth theme: impact on student and patient follow-up. The authors created a 21-item questionnaire, based on these themes that used a 5-point Likert scale from "Strongly Agree" to "Strongly Disagree". The authors emailed an electronic survey link to each consenting student immediately following their clerkship experience in Ambulatory Medicine/Family Medicine.
33 of 53 consenting students (62%) returned completed questionnaires. Most students liked the EHR's ability to organize information, with 70% of students responding that essential information was easier to find electronically. Only 36% and 33% of students reported accessing online patient information or clinical guidelines more often when using the EHR than when using paper charts. Most students (72%) reported asking more history questions due to EHR prompts, and 39% ordered more clinical preventive services. Most students (69%) reported that the EHR improved their documentation. 39% of students responded that they received more feedback on their EHR notes compared to paper chart notes. Only 64% of students were satisfied with the doctor-patient communication with the EHR, and 48% stated they spent less time looking at the patient.
Third year medical students reported generally positive attitudes towards using the EHR in the ambulatory setting. They reported receiving more feedback on their electronic charts than on paper charts. However, students reported significant concerns about the potential impact of the EHR on their ability to conduct the doctor-patient encounter.
美国学术医疗中心越来越多地将电子健康记录(EHR)纳入教学环境。我们报告了三年级医学生对在门诊基层医疗诊所使用电子健康记录进行临床学习的态度。
在2005 - 06学年,60名三年级学生在完成必修的门诊医学/家庭医学实习后被邀请填写一份问卷。作者通过询问一个三年级学生焦点小组使用电子健康记录如何影响他们的学习来确定问卷主题。出现了五个主题:信息组织、在线资源获取、电子健康记录提示、个人表现(记录和展示)以及与患者和带教老师的沟通。作者添加了第六个主题:对学生和患者随访的影响。作者基于这些主题创建了一份21项的问卷,使用从“强烈同意”到“强烈不同意”的5点李克特量表。在学生完成门诊医学/家庭医学实习后,作者立即通过电子邮件向每位同意参与的学生发送电子调查链接。
53名同意参与的学生中有33名(62%)返回了完整的问卷。大多数学生喜欢电子健康记录组织信息的能力,70%的学生表示重要信息通过电子方式更容易找到。只有36%和33%的学生报告称,与使用纸质病历相比,使用电子健康记录时更频繁地访问在线患者信息或临床指南。大多数学生(72%)报告称由于电子健康记录提示会询问更多病史问题,39%的学生开具了更多临床预防服务。大多数学生(69%)报告称电子健康记录改善了他们的记录。39%的学生回应称与纸质病历记录相比,他们在电子健康记录记录上收到了更多反馈。只有64%的学生对使用电子健康记录时的医患沟通感到满意,48%的学生表示他们看患者的时间减少了。
三年级医学生对在门诊环境中使用电子健康记录普遍持积极态度。他们报告称在电子病历上比在纸质病历上收到了更多反馈。然而,学生们对电子健康记录对他们进行医患交流能力的潜在影响表示了重大担忧。