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Emergency Physicians' Perspectives on Their Use of Health Information Exchange

Study objective We explore what emergency physicians with access to health information exchange have to say about it and strive to better understand the factors affecting their use of it. Methods A qualitative study using grounded theory principles was conducted in 4 urban emergency departments that...

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Published in:Annals of emergency medicine 2014-03, Vol.63 (3), p.329-337
Main Authors: Thorn, Shirley A., PhD, MN, Carter, Michael A., DNSc, DNP, Bailey, James E., MD, MPH
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Language:English
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c432t-3736543cdcef59c03f9ca91eb5031f2301f3622152b0397cdd0ef6cc5d2264213
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container_title Annals of emergency medicine
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creator Thorn, Shirley A., PhD, MN
Carter, Michael A., DNSc, DNP
Bailey, James E., MD, MPH
description Study objective We explore what emergency physicians with access to health information exchange have to say about it and strive to better understand the factors affecting their use of it. Methods A qualitative study using grounded theory principles was conducted in 4 urban emergency departments that had health information exchange access for 4 years. Data were collected with unstructured interviews from 15 emergency physicians. Results Emergency physicians reported that a number of factors affected their use of health information exchange, but the most prevalent was that it was not user friendly and disrupted workflow. Five major themes emerged: variations in using health information exchange and its access, influencing clinical decisions, balancing challenges and barriers, recognizing benefits and success factors, and justifying not using health information exchange. The themes supported a theoretical interpretation that the process of using health information exchange is more complex than balancing challenges or barriers against benefits, but also how they justify not using it when making clinical decisions. We found that health information exchange systems need to be transformed to meet the needs of emergency physicians and incorporated into their workflow if it is going to be successful. The emergency physicians also identified needed improvements that would increase the frequency of health information exchange use. Conclusion The emergency physicians reported that health information exchange disrupted their workflow and was less than desirable to use. The health information exchange systems need to adapt to the needs of the end user to be both useful and useable for emergency physicians.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2013.09.024
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Methods A qualitative study using grounded theory principles was conducted in 4 urban emergency departments that had health information exchange access for 4 years. Data were collected with unstructured interviews from 15 emergency physicians. Results Emergency physicians reported that a number of factors affected their use of health information exchange, but the most prevalent was that it was not user friendly and disrupted workflow. Five major themes emerged: variations in using health information exchange and its access, influencing clinical decisions, balancing challenges and barriers, recognizing benefits and success factors, and justifying not using health information exchange. The themes supported a theoretical interpretation that the process of using health information exchange is more complex than balancing challenges or barriers against benefits, but also how they justify not using it when making clinical decisions. We found that health information exchange systems need to be transformed to meet the needs of emergency physicians and incorporated into their workflow if it is going to be successful. The emergency physicians also identified needed improvements that would increase the frequency of health information exchange use. Conclusion The emergency physicians reported that health information exchange disrupted their workflow and was less than desirable to use. 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Methods A qualitative study using grounded theory principles was conducted in 4 urban emergency departments that had health information exchange access for 4 years. Data were collected with unstructured interviews from 15 emergency physicians. Results Emergency physicians reported that a number of factors affected their use of health information exchange, but the most prevalent was that it was not user friendly and disrupted workflow. Five major themes emerged: variations in using health information exchange and its access, influencing clinical decisions, balancing challenges and barriers, recognizing benefits and success factors, and justifying not using health information exchange. The themes supported a theoretical interpretation that the process of using health information exchange is more complex than balancing challenges or barriers against benefits, but also how they justify not using it when making clinical decisions. We found that health information exchange systems need to be transformed to meet the needs of emergency physicians and incorporated into their workflow if it is going to be successful. The emergency physicians also identified needed improvements that would increase the frequency of health information exchange use. Conclusion The emergency physicians reported that health information exchange disrupted their workflow and was less than desirable to use. 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We found that health information exchange systems need to be transformed to meet the needs of emergency physicians and incorporated into their workflow if it is going to be successful. The emergency physicians also identified needed improvements that would increase the frequency of health information exchange use. Conclusion The emergency physicians reported that health information exchange disrupted their workflow and was less than desirable to use. The health information exchange systems need to adapt to the needs of the end user to be both useful and useable for emergency physicians.</abstract><cop>United States</cop><pub>Mosby, Inc</pub><pmid>24161840</pmid><doi>10.1016/j.annemergmed.2013.09.024</doi><tpages>9</tpages></addata></record>
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subjects Access to Information
Attitude of Health Personnel
Emergency
Emergency Medicine
Emergency Service, Hospital
Health Information Systems - standards
Health Information Systems - utilization
Humans
Interviews as Topic
Qualitative Research
title Emergency Physicians' Perspectives on Their Use of Health Information Exchange
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