Department of Medicine & Center for Clinical Informatics and Improvement Research, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California, USA.
Department of Health Policy, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2020 Aug 1;27(8):1206-1213. doi: 10.1093/jamia/ocaa129.
To measure US hospitals' adoption of electronic health record (EHR) functions that support care for older adults, focusing on structured documentation of the 4Ms (What Matters, Medication, Mentation, and Mobility) and electronic health information exchange/communication with patients, caregivers, and long-term care providers.
In an online survey of a national, random sample of 797 US acute-care hospitals in 2018-2019, 479 (60.1%) responded. We calculated nationally representative measures of the percentages of hospitals with EHRs that include structured documentation of the 4Ms and exchange/communications functions.
Structured EHR documentation of the 4Ms was fully implemented in at least 1 unit in 64.0% of hospitals and across all units in 41.5% of hospitals. Of the 4Ms, structured documentation was the highest for medications (91.3% in at least 1 unit) and the lowest for mentation (70.3% in at least 1 unit). All exchange/communication functions had been implemented in at least 1 unit in 16.2% of facilities and across all units in 7.6% of hospitals. Less than half of the hospitals had an EHR portal for long-term care facilities to access hospital information (45.4% in at least 1 unit), sent information electronically to long-term care facilities (44.6%), and had training for adults/caregivers on the patient portal (32.1%).
Despite significant national investment in EHRs, hospital EHRs do not yet include key documentation, exchange, and communication functions needed to support evidence-based care for the older adults who comprise the majority of the inpatient population. Additional policy efforts are likely needed to promote the expansion of EHR capabilities into these high-value domains.
US acute-care hospital EHRs are lacking key functions that support care for older adults.
衡量美国医院采用电子健康记录(EHR)功能来支持老年人护理的情况,重点关注 4Ms(重要事项、药物、心理状态和活动能力)的结构化记录以及与患者、护理人员和长期护理提供者的电子健康信息交换/通信。
在 2018-2019 年期间,对全国范围内的 797 家美国急症护理医院进行了一项在线调查,共有 479 家(60.1%)医院做出了回应。我们计算了具有 4Ms 结构化文档记录和交换/通信功能的医院的全国代表性百分比。
至少有 1 个单元实施了 4Ms 的结构化 EHR 文档记录的医院占 64.0%,所有单元都实施了结构化文档记录的医院占 41.5%。在 4Ms 中,药物的结构化文档记录最高(至少 1 个单元中有 91.3%),心理状态的结构化文档记录最低(至少 1 个单元中有 70.3%)。所有交换/通信功能至少在 16.2%的医疗机构中有实施,在 7.6%的医院中所有单元都有实施。不到一半的医院为长期护理机构设有 EHR 门户以访问医院信息(至少 1 个单元中有 45.4%),电子向长期护理机构发送信息(44.6%),并对患者门户的成年人/护理人员进行培训(32.1%)。
尽管美国在 EHR 方面进行了大量投资,但医院的 EHR 仍然缺乏支持占住院患者多数的老年人的循证护理所需的关键文档、交换和通信功能。可能需要进一步的政策努力来推动 EHR 功能扩展到这些高价值领域。
美国急症护理医院的 EHR 缺乏支持老年人护理的关键功能。