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Multidisciplinary user experience of a newly implemented electronic patient record in Ireland: An exploratory qualitative study

•The sucessful integration of Electronic Patient Records (EPRs) is core to the digital strategies of contemporary healthcare organisations.•In-depth preparation and understanding of clinical workflows are crucial for a successful rollout of Electronic Patient Record (EPR).•The EPR will enable examin...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:International journal of medical informatics (Shannon, Ireland) Ireland), 2024-05, Vol.185, p.105399-105399, Article 105399
Main Authors: Brady, Anne-Marie, Fortune, Jennifer, Ali, Ahmed Hassan, Prizeman, Geraldine, To, Wing Ting, Courtney, Grainne, Stokes, Kama, Roche, Miriam
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•The sucessful integration of Electronic Patient Records (EPRs) is core to the digital strategies of contemporary healthcare organisations.•In-depth preparation and understanding of clinical workflows are crucial for a successful rollout of Electronic Patient Record (EPR).•The EPR will enable examination of the variability in processes and outcomes within healthcare institutions. Implementation of an Electronic Patient Record (EPR) in a key milestone in the digital strategy of modern healthcare organisations. The implementation of EPR systems can be viewed as challenging and complex. The aim of the study was to investigate user perspectives and experiences of the implementation of an Electronic Medical Record in a major academic teaching hospital, with simultaneous ‘go-live’ across the whole hospital taking place. Focus groups and individual in-depth interviews were conducted with stakeholders and users (n = 105), approximately nine months post-EPR implementation. The study explored EPR users’ perceptions using an extended theoretical framework of the DeLone and McLean Information Systems Success Model (2003), which measured information systems, system quality, information quality, service quality, use/perceived usefulness & user satisfaction and net benefits. Staff engagement and satisfaction was high and the EPR is accepted as the new standard way of completing care. There was agreement that the EPR affords transparency, and greater accountability. There was some concern expressed regarding impact of the EPR on interprofessional and patient/provider interactions and communication. Physicians reported the inputting of social history through free text as an issue of concern and time consuming. The Big Bang approach with mandatory conversion was key to the successful adoption of EPR. There was consensus across professional and administrative respondents that there was no appetite to return to paper-based records. The successful roll out of the EPR reflects the digital readiness of healthcare providers and organisations. The potential for unintended consequences on work process requires continual monitoring. A key future benefit of the EPR will be the capacity to reach a broader understanding and analysis of variation in processes and outcomes within healthcare organisations. It is clear that skills in data analytics will be needed to mine data successfully.
ISSN:1386-5056
1872-8243
DOI:10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2024.105399