Department of Biomedical Informatics, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210, USA.
J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2013 Jul-Aug;20(4):718-26. doi: 10.1136/amiajnl-2012-000946. Epub 2013 Jan 25.
Clinical documentation is central to the medical record and so to a range of healthcare and business processes. As electronic health record adoption expands, computerized provider documentation (CPD) is increasingly the primary means of capturing clinical documentation. Previous CPD studies have focused on particular stakeholder groups and sites, often limiting their scope and conclusions. To address this, we studied multiple stakeholder groups from multiple sites across the USA.
We conducted 14 focus groups at five Department of Veterans Affairs facilities with 129 participants (54 physicians or practitioners, 34 nurses, and 37 administrators). Investigators qualitatively analyzed resultant transcripts, developed categories linked to the data, and identified emergent themes.
Five major themes related to CPD emerged: communication and coordination; control and limitations in expressivity; information availability and reasoning support; workflow alteration and disruption; and trust and confidence concerns. The results highlight that documentation intertwines tightly with clinical and administrative workflow. Perceptions differed between the three stakeholder groups but remained consistent within groups across facilities.
CPD has dramatically changed documentation processes, impacting clinical understanding, decision-making, and communication across multiple groups. The need for easy and rapid, yet structured and constrained, documentation often conflicts with the need for highly reliable and retrievable information to support clinical reasoning and workflows. Current CPD systems, while better than paper overall, often do not meet the needs of users, partly because they are based on an outdated 'paper-chart' paradigm. These findings should inform those implementing CPD systems now and future plans for more effective CPD systems.
临床文档是医疗记录的核心,因此也是一系列医疗保健和业务流程的核心。随着电子健康记录的采用不断扩大,计算机化医嘱录入(CPD)越来越成为获取临床文档的主要手段。以前的 CPD 研究主要集中在特定的利益相关者群体和地点,往往限制了其范围和结论。为了解决这个问题,我们研究了来自美国多个地点的多个利益相关者群体。
我们在五个退伍军人事务部设施进行了 14 次焦点小组,共有 129 名参与者(54 名医生或从业者,34 名护士,37 名管理人员)。研究人员对所得转录本进行了定性分析,开发了与数据相关的类别,并确定了新兴主题。
出现了五个与 CPD 相关的主要主题:沟通和协调;表达的控制和限制;信息可用性和推理支持;工作流程改变和中断;以及信任和信心问题。结果表明,文档与临床和行政工作流程紧密交织。三个利益相关者群体之间的看法有所不同,但在各设施内的群体中保持一致。
CPD 极大地改变了文档处理过程,影响了多个群体的临床理解、决策和沟通。对简单、快速但又具有结构性和约束性的文档的需求,常常与对支持临床推理和工作流程的高度可靠和可检索信息的需求相冲突。当前的 CPD 系统虽然总体上优于纸质系统,但往往不能满足用户的需求,部分原因是它们基于过时的“纸质图表”范式。这些发现应该为现在和未来更有效的 CPD 系统的实施者提供信息。