Exploring the Impact of In Basket Metrics on the Adoption of a New Electronic Health Record System Among Specialists in a Tertiary Hospital in Alberta: Descriptive Study

BackgroundHealth care organizations implement electronic health record (EHR) systems with the expectation of improved patient care and enhanced provider performance. However, while these technologies hold the potential to create improved care and system efficiencies, they can...

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出版年:Journal of Medical Internet Research
主要な著者: Melita Avdagovska, Craig Kuziemsky, Helia Koosha, Maliheh Hadizadeh, Robert P Pauly, Timothy Graham, Tania Stafinski, David Bigam, Narmin Kassam, Devidas Menon
フォーマット: 論文
言語:英語
出版事項: JMIR Publications 2024-04-01
オンライン・アクセス:https://www.jmir.org/2024/1/e53122
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author Melita Avdagovska
Craig Kuziemsky
Helia Koosha
Maliheh Hadizadeh
Robert P Pauly
Timothy Graham
Tania Stafinski
David Bigam
Narmin Kassam
Devidas Menon
author_facet Melita Avdagovska
Craig Kuziemsky
Helia Koosha
Maliheh Hadizadeh
Robert P Pauly
Timothy Graham
Tania Stafinski
David Bigam
Narmin Kassam
Devidas Menon
author_sort Melita Avdagovska
collection DOAJ
container_title Journal of Medical Internet Research
description BackgroundHealth care organizations implement electronic health record (EHR) systems with the expectation of improved patient care and enhanced provider performance. However, while these technologies hold the potential to create improved care and system efficiencies, they can also lead to unintended negative consequences, such as patient safety issues, communication problems, and provider burnout. ObjectiveThis study aims to document metrics related to the In Basket communication hub (time in In Basket per day, time in In Basket per appointment, In Basket messages received per day, and turnaround time) of the EHR system implemented by Alberta Health Services, the province-wide health delivery system called Connect Care (Epic Systems). The objective was to identify how a newly implemented EHR system was used, the timing of its use, and the duration of use specifically related to In Basket activities. MethodsA descriptive study was conducted. Due to the diversity of specialties, the providers were grouped into medical and surgical based on previous similar studies. The participants were further subgrouped based on their self-reported clinical full-time equivalent (FTE ) measure. This resulted in 3 subgroups for analysis: medical FTE <0.5, medical FTE >0.5, and surgical (all of whom reported FTE >0.5). The analysis was limited to outpatient clinical interactions and explicitly excluded inpatient activities. ResultsA total of 72 participants from 19 different specialties enrolled in this study. The providers had, on average, 8.31 appointments per day during the reporting periods. The providers received, on average, 21.93 messages per day, and they spent 7.61 minutes on average in the time in In Basket per day metric and 1.84 minutes on average in the time in In Basket per appointment metric. The time for the providers to mark messages as done (turnaround time) was on average 11.45 days during the reporting period. Although the surgical group had, on average, approximately twice as many appointments per scheduled day, they spent considerably less connected time (based on almost all time metrics) than the medical group. However, the surgical group took much longer than the medical group to mark messages as done (turnaround time). ConclusionsWe observed a range of patterns with no consistent direction. There does not seem to be evidence of a “learning curve,” which would have shown a consistent reduction in time spent on the system over time due to familiarity and experience. While this study does not show how the included metrics could be used as predictors of providers’ satisfaction or feelings of burnout, the use trends could be used to start discussions about future Canadian studies needed in this area.
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spelling doaj-art-04e20f35c30e4d2aba5cc508d3ff58c12025-08-19T22:41:30ZengJMIR PublicationsJournal of Medical Internet Research1438-88712024-04-0126e5312210.2196/53122Exploring the Impact of In Basket Metrics on the Adoption of a New Electronic Health Record System Among Specialists in a Tertiary Hospital in Alberta: Descriptive StudyMelita Avdagovskahttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-7932-4590Craig Kuziemskyhttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-3904-5372Helia Kooshahttps://orcid.org/0009-0003-8279-2872Maliheh Hadizadehhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-7038-6450Robert P Paulyhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-9642-5315Timothy Grahamhttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-7896-4561Tania Stafinskihttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-6679-7823David Bigamhttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-2285-4173Narmin Kassamhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-9920-3849Devidas Menonhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-4172-8634 BackgroundHealth care organizations implement electronic health record (EHR) systems with the expectation of improved patient care and enhanced provider performance. However, while these technologies hold the potential to create improved care and system efficiencies, they can also lead to unintended negative consequences, such as patient safety issues, communication problems, and provider burnout. ObjectiveThis study aims to document metrics related to the In Basket communication hub (time in In Basket per day, time in In Basket per appointment, In Basket messages received per day, and turnaround time) of the EHR system implemented by Alberta Health Services, the province-wide health delivery system called Connect Care (Epic Systems). The objective was to identify how a newly implemented EHR system was used, the timing of its use, and the duration of use specifically related to In Basket activities. MethodsA descriptive study was conducted. Due to the diversity of specialties, the providers were grouped into medical and surgical based on previous similar studies. The participants were further subgrouped based on their self-reported clinical full-time equivalent (FTE ) measure. This resulted in 3 subgroups for analysis: medical FTE <0.5, medical FTE >0.5, and surgical (all of whom reported FTE >0.5). The analysis was limited to outpatient clinical interactions and explicitly excluded inpatient activities. ResultsA total of 72 participants from 19 different specialties enrolled in this study. The providers had, on average, 8.31 appointments per day during the reporting periods. The providers received, on average, 21.93 messages per day, and they spent 7.61 minutes on average in the time in In Basket per day metric and 1.84 minutes on average in the time in In Basket per appointment metric. The time for the providers to mark messages as done (turnaround time) was on average 11.45 days during the reporting period. Although the surgical group had, on average, approximately twice as many appointments per scheduled day, they spent considerably less connected time (based on almost all time metrics) than the medical group. However, the surgical group took much longer than the medical group to mark messages as done (turnaround time). ConclusionsWe observed a range of patterns with no consistent direction. There does not seem to be evidence of a “learning curve,” which would have shown a consistent reduction in time spent on the system over time due to familiarity and experience. While this study does not show how the included metrics could be used as predictors of providers’ satisfaction or feelings of burnout, the use trends could be used to start discussions about future Canadian studies needed in this area.https://www.jmir.org/2024/1/e53122
spellingShingle Melita Avdagovska
Craig Kuziemsky
Helia Koosha
Maliheh Hadizadeh
Robert P Pauly
Timothy Graham
Tania Stafinski
David Bigam
Narmin Kassam
Devidas Menon
Exploring the Impact of In Basket Metrics on the Adoption of a New Electronic Health Record System Among Specialists in a Tertiary Hospital in Alberta: Descriptive Study
title Exploring the Impact of In Basket Metrics on the Adoption of a New Electronic Health Record System Among Specialists in a Tertiary Hospital in Alberta: Descriptive Study
title_full Exploring the Impact of In Basket Metrics on the Adoption of a New Electronic Health Record System Among Specialists in a Tertiary Hospital in Alberta: Descriptive Study
title_fullStr Exploring the Impact of In Basket Metrics on the Adoption of a New Electronic Health Record System Among Specialists in a Tertiary Hospital in Alberta: Descriptive Study
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the Impact of In Basket Metrics on the Adoption of a New Electronic Health Record System Among Specialists in a Tertiary Hospital in Alberta: Descriptive Study
title_short Exploring the Impact of In Basket Metrics on the Adoption of a New Electronic Health Record System Among Specialists in a Tertiary Hospital in Alberta: Descriptive Study
title_sort exploring the impact of in basket metrics on the adoption of a new electronic health record system among specialists in a tertiary hospital in alberta descriptive study
url https://www.jmir.org/2024/1/e53122
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