McCormack James L, Thomas Tracey L, Barnes Chrystal, Sanchez Victoria, Kenzie Erin S, Coury Jennifer, Hatch Brigit A, Weekley Tiffany, Singh Maya A, Davis Melinda M
Oregon Rural Practice-Based Research Network, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR 97239, United States.
Department of Medical Informatics and Clinical Epidemiology, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR 97239, United States.
J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2025 Jul 1;32(7):1157-1163. doi: 10.1093/jamia/ocaf083.
Screening Brief Intervention and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) can reduce the health and social costs associated with unhealthy alcohol use (UAU). Electronic health records (EHRs) can support evidence-based screening practices for UAU and provide performance data needed for quality improvement. The objective of this study was to describe barriers faced by primary care clinics when using EHR systems to support UAU screening and delivery of recommended interventions.
The Partnerships to Enhance Alcohol Screening, Treatment, and Intervention program (ANTECEDENT) was designed to promote the adoption of SBIRT in primary care clinics through 15 months of tailored practice facilitation. Qualitative data about the participants' experiences were collected through clinic contact logs, periodic reflections, and interviews with practice facilitators and clinic project leads. Data were analyzed through qualitative content analysis to identify and describe the challenges encountered by clinics and facilitators using an 8-domain framework developed to describe socio-technical factors in EHR use.
Forty-eight clinics using 9 different EHRs participated in a tailored practice facilitation. Common EHR-related barriers to SBIRT implementation included an inability to report SBIRT performance data, a lack of reminders for screening, few built-in assessments, cumbersome documentation tasks, workflow variation, limited informatics support, and competing organizational priorities.
Sittig and Singh's framework provided a unique perspective on the challenges primary care clinics participating in ANTECEDENT experienced using a range of EHR systems to support and deliver quality improvements using the SBIRT framework. Our findings were consistent with previous studies evaluating EHR barriers in quality improvement work, and those identified by fellow grantees of the EvidenceNOW: Managing Unhealthy Alcohol Use initiative funded by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
Clinics experience multiple challenges using EHRs to ensure that patients receive needed screening and follow-up for UAU. While vendors may provide relevant capabilities, research is needed to examine what factors affect clinics' awareness, adoption, and use of available EHR features and which are lacking.
筛查、简短干预与转诊治疗(SBIRT)可降低与不健康饮酒(UAU)相关的健康和社会成本。电子健康记录(EHR)可支持基于证据的UAU筛查实践,并提供质量改进所需的绩效数据。本研究的目的是描述初级保健诊所使用EHR系统支持UAU筛查及提供推荐干预措施时所面临的障碍。
加强酒精筛查、治疗和干预合作项目(ANTECEDENT)旨在通过15个月的定制实践促进,推动初级保健诊所采用SBIRT。通过诊所联系日志、定期反思以及对实践促进者和诊所项目负责人的访谈,收集了有关参与者经历的定性数据。通过定性内容分析对数据进行分析,以使用为描述EHR使用中的社会技术因素而开发的8领域框架,识别和描述诊所及促进者遇到的挑战。
48家使用9种不同EHR的诊所参与了定制实践促进。SBIRT实施中与EHR相关的常见障碍包括无法报告SBIRT绩效数据、缺乏筛查提醒、内置评估少、文档任务繁琐、工作流程差异、信息学支持有限以及相互竞争的组织优先事项。
西蒂格和辛格的框架为参与ANTECEDENT的初级保健诊所使用一系列EHR系统支持并利用SBIRT框架实现质量改进时所经历的挑战提供了独特视角。我们的研究结果与之前评估质量改进工作中EHR障碍的研究一致,也与医疗保健研究与质量局资助的“EvidenceNOW:管理不健康饮酒”倡议的其他受资助者所确定的障碍一致。
诊所在使用EHR确保患者接受所需的UAU筛查和随访方面面临多重挑战。虽然供应商可能提供相关功能,但需要进行研究以考察哪些因素影响诊所对可用EHR功能的认识、采用和使用,以及哪些功能尚不存在。