Mayo Clinic Evidence-Based Practice Center, Mayo Clinic Robert D. and Patricia E. Kern Center for the Science of Healthcare Delivery, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA.
Division of Community Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2024 Nov;39(14):2837-2848. doi: 10.1007/s11606-024-08956-8. Epub 2024 Jul 29.
The enactment of the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act and the wide adoption of electronic health record (EHR) systems have ushered in increasing documentation burden, frequently cited as a key factor affecting the work experience of healthcare professionals and a contributor to burnout. This systematic review aims to identify and characterize measures of documentation burden.
We integrated discussions with Key Informants and a comprehensive search of the literature, including MEDLINE, Embase, Scopus, and gray literature published between 2010 and 2023. Data were narratively and thematically synthesized.
We identified 135 articles about measuring documentation burden. We classified measures into 11 categories: overall time spent in EHR, activities related to clinical documentation, inbox management, time spent in clinical review, time spent in orders, work outside work/after hours, administrative tasks (billing and insurance related), fragmentation of workflow, measures of efficiency, EHR activity rate, and usability. The most common source of data for most measures was EHR usage logs. Direct tracking such as through time-motion analysis was fairly uncommon. Measures were developed and applied across various settings and populations, with physicians and nurses in the USA being the most frequently represented healthcare professionals. Evidence of validity of these measures was limited and incomplete. Data on the appropriateness of measures in terms of scalability, feasibility, or equity across various contexts were limited. The physician perspective was the most robustly captured and prominently focused on increased stress and burnout.
Numerous measures for documentation burden are available and have been tested in a variety of settings and contexts. However, most are one-dimensional, do not capture various domains of this construct, and lack robust validity evidence. This report serves as a call to action highlighting an urgent need for measure development that represents diverse clinical contexts and support future interventions.
《健康信息技术经济临床健康法案》的颁布和电子健康记录(EHR)系统的广泛采用带来了日益繁重的文件记录负担,这经常被认为是影响医疗保健专业人员工作体验的关键因素之一,并导致职业倦怠。本系统评价旨在确定和描述文件记录负担的测量方法。
我们整合了与关键知情人的讨论和对文献的全面搜索,包括 MEDLINE、Embase、Scopus 和 2010 年至 2023 年期间发表的灰色文献。对数据进行了叙述性和主题性综合。
我们确定了 135 篇关于测量文件记录负担的文章。我们将测量方法分为 11 类:在 EHR 中花费的总时间、与临床文档相关的活动、收件箱管理、临床审查时间、医嘱时间、工作时间之外/下班后、行政任务(与计费和保险相关)、工作流程碎片化、效率测量、EHR 活动率和可用性。大多数措施最常见的数据来源是 EHR 使用日志。直接跟踪(例如通过时间运动分析)相当少见。这些措施是在各种环境和人群中开发和应用的,美国的医生和护士是最常代表的医疗保健专业人员。这些措施的有效性证据有限且不完整。关于在不同背景下的可扩展性、可行性或公平性方面,这些措施的适当性的数据有限。医生的观点是最全面和重点关注的,强调压力和职业倦怠的增加。
有许多用于文件记录负担的测量方法,并且已经在各种环境和背景下进行了测试。然而,大多数方法都是一维的,无法捕捉到这个构念的各个领域,并且缺乏强有力的有效性证据。本报告呼吁采取行动,强调迫切需要开发能够代表不同临床环境并支持未来干预措施的测量方法。