Crowley Kenyon, Mishra Anubhuti, Cruz-Cano Raul, Gold Robert, Kleinman Dushanka, Agarwal Ritu
Center for Health Information & Decision Systems, Decision, Operations and Information Technologies Department, Robert H. Smith School of Business, University of Maryland (Mr Crowley, Ms Mishra, and Dr Agarwal) and University of Maryland iSchool, College Park, Maryland (Mr Crowley); ICF International, Fairfax, Virginia (Ms Mishra); and Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland (Drs Cruz-Cano, Gold, and Kleinman).
J Public Health Manag Pract. 2019 Jan/Feb;25(1):E11-E16. doi: 10.1097/PHH.0000000000000768.
Evaluate an electronic health record (EHR) implementation across a large public health department to better understand and improve implementation effectiveness of EHRs in public health departments.
A survey based on Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research constructs was administered to staff before and after implementation of an EHR.
Large suburban county department of health and human services that provides clinical, behavioral, social, and oral health services.
Staff across 4 program areas completed the survey prior to EHR implementation (n = 331, June 2014) and 3 months post-EHR final implementation (n = 229, December 2015).
Electronic health record MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES:: Constructs were validated using confirmatory factor analysis and included information strengths and information gaps in the current environment; EHR impacts; ease of use; future use intentions; usefulness; knowledge of system; and training. Paired t tests and Wilcoxon signed rank tests of a matched sample were performed to compare the pre-/postrespondent scores.
A majority of user perceptions and expectations showed a significant (P < .05) decline 3 months postimplementation as compared with the baseline with variation by service area and construct. Staff perceived the EHR to be less useful and more complex, provide fewer benefits, and reduce information access shortly after implementation.
Electronic health records can benefit public health practices in many ways; however, public health departments will face significant challenges incorporating EHRs, which are typically designed for non-public health settings, into the public health workflow. Electronic health record implementation recommendations for health departments are provided. When implementing an EHR in a public health setting, health departments should provide extensive preimplementation training opportunities, including EHR training tailored to job roles, competencies, and tasks; assess usability and specific capabilities at a more granular level as part of procurement processes and consider using contracting language to facilitate usability, patient safety, and related evaluations to enhance effectiveness and efficiencies and make results public; apply standard terminologies, processes, and data structures across different health department service areas using common public health terminologies; and craft workforce communication campaigns that balance potential expected benefits with realistic expectations.
评估一个大型公共卫生部门实施电子健康记录(EHR)的情况,以更好地理解和提高公共卫生部门EHR的实施效果。
在EHR实施前后,对工作人员进行基于实施研究综合框架构建的调查。
提供临床、行为、社会和口腔健康服务的大型郊区县卫生与公众服务部。
4个项目领域的工作人员在EHR实施前(2014年6月,n = 331)和EHR最终实施后3个月(2015年12月,n = 229)完成了调查。
电子健康记录
使用验证性因子分析对构建指标进行验证,包括当前环境中的信息优势和信息差距;EHR影响;易用性;未来使用意图;有用性;系统知识;以及培训。对匹配样本进行配对t检验和Wilcoxon符号秩检验,以比较前后受访者的得分。
与基线相比,大多数用户认知和期望在实施后3个月出现显著(P < .05)下降,且因服务领域和构建指标而异。工作人员认为EHR在实施后不久实用性降低、更复杂,带来的益处减少,且信息获取受限。
电子健康记录可在许多方面使公共卫生实践受益;然而,公共卫生部门在将通常为非公共卫生环境设计的EHR纳入公共卫生工作流程时将面临重大挑战。本文为卫生部门提供了电子健康记录实施建议。在公共卫生环境中实施EHR时,卫生部门应提供广泛的实施前培训机会,包括针对工作角色、能力和任务量身定制的EHR培训;在采购过程中更细致地评估可用性和特定功能,并考虑使用合同语言来促进可用性、患者安全及相关评估,以提高有效性和效率并公开结果;使用通用的公共卫生术语在不同卫生部门服务领域应用标准术语、流程和数据结构;并开展工作人员沟通活动,平衡潜在的预期收益与现实期望。