Institute of Global Health Innovation, National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Imperial Patient Safety Translational Research Centre, Imperial College London, London, UK.
Johns Hopkins Children's Center, Baltimore, MD, USA.
BMC Med Inform Decis Mak. 2023 Aug 12;23(1):158. doi: 10.1186/s12911-023-02255-8.
In the era of electronic health records (EHR), the ability to share clinical data is a key facilitator of healthcare delivery. Since the introduction of EHRs, this aspect has been extensively studied from the perspective of healthcare providers. Less often explored are the day-to-day challenges surrounding the procurement, deployment, maintenance, and use of interoperable EHR systems, from the perspective of healthcare administrators, such as chief clinical information officers (CCIOs).
Our study aims to capture the perceptions of CCIOs on the current state of EHR interoperability in the NHS, its impact on patient safety, the perceived facilitators and barriers to improving EHR interoperability, and what the future of EHR development in the NHS may entail.
Semi-structured interviews were conducted between November 2020 - October 2021. Convenience sampling was employed to recruit NHS England CCIOs. Interviews were digitally recorded and transcribed verbatim. A thematic analysis was performed by two independent researchers to identify emerging themes.
Fifteen CCIOs participated in the study. Participants reported that limited EHR interoperability contributed to the inability to easily access and transfer data into a unified source, thus resulting in data fragmentation. The resulting lack of clarity on patients' health status negatively impacts patient safety through suboptimal care coordination, duplication of efforts, and more defensive practice. Facilitators to improving interoperability included the recognition of the need by clinicians, patient expectations, and the inherent centralised nature of the NHS. Barriers included systems usability difficulties, and institutional, data management, and financial-related challenges. Looking ahead, participants acknowledged that realising that vision across the NHS would require a renewed focus on mandating data standards, user-centred design, greater patient involvement, and encouraging inter-organisational collaboration.
Tackling poor interoperability will require solutions both at the technical level and in the wider policy context. This will involve demanding interoperability functionalities from the outset in procurement contracts, fostering greater inter-organisation cooperation on implementation strategies, and encouraging systems vendors to prioritise interoperability in their products. Only by comprehensively addressing these challenges would the full potential promised by the use of fully interoperable EHRs be realised.
在电子健康记录 (EHR) 时代,共享临床数据的能力是医疗保健提供的关键促进因素。自引入 EHR 以来,从医疗保健提供者的角度广泛研究了这一方面。从医疗保健管理人员(如首席临床信息官 (CCIO))的角度来看,很少有人探讨采购、部署、维护和使用互操作 EHR 系统所面临的日常挑战。
我们的研究旨在捕捉 CCIO 对英国国家医疗服务体系 (NHS) 中 EHR 互操作性的现状、对患者安全的影响、提高 EHR 互操作性的感知促进因素和障碍,以及 NHS 中 EHR 发展的未来可能需要什么。
2020 年 11 月至 2021 年 10 月期间进行了半结构化访谈。采用便利抽样法招募英格兰 NHS 的 CCIO。对访谈进行了数字录音和逐字转录。两名独立研究人员对主题进行了分析,以确定新出现的主题。
15 名 CCIO 参与了这项研究。参与者报告说,有限的 EHR 互操作性导致难以轻松访问和将数据传输到统一的来源,从而导致数据碎片化。由此导致的对患者健康状况的不明确性通过次优的护理协调、重复工作和更多的防御性实践对患者安全产生负面影响。提高互操作性的促进因素包括临床医生、患者期望以及 NHS 固有集中化性质的认识。障碍包括系统可用性困难以及机构、数据管理和财务相关挑战。展望未来,参与者承认,要在整个 NHS 实现这一愿景,需要重新关注授权数据标准、以用户为中心的设计、更大程度地让患者参与进来,并鼓励组织间的合作。
解决互操作性差的问题需要在技术层面和更广泛的政策环境中都采取解决方案。这将需要在采购合同中从一开始就要求互操作性功能,促进在实施策略方面加强组织间合作,并鼓励系统供应商在其产品中优先考虑互操作性。只有全面应对这些挑战,才能充分发挥完全互操作的 EHR 所带来的全部潜力。