The effects of an Electronic Medical Record on patient care: clinician attitudes in a large HMO.
- 1 January 1998
- journal article
- p. 150-4
Abstract
The purpose of this study is to examine the attitudes of clinicians in a large HMO toward the effect of an outpatient Electronic Medical Record system on the quality of patient care. Attitudes toward a Results Reporting system and an online charting and ordering system are also compared. A cross-sectional study was performed using a survey of Kaiser Permanente Northwest clinicians. In addition, interviews were conducted with the physician leaders of the clinical departments at Kaiser Permanente Northwest. Clinician attitudes are measured regarding the effects of a Results Reporting system and an online charting and ordering system on the overall quality of patient care and other care-related indices. Most clinicians feel that the outpatient Electronic Medical Record has improved the overall quality of patient care, with 72% reporting an improvement with the use of the Results Reporting system, and 60% reporting an improvement with the use of the online charting and ordering system. On average, clinicians feel that the EMR has also improved the quality of the patient-clinician interaction, the ability to coordinate the care of patients with other departments, the ability to detect medication errors, the timeliness of referrals, and the ability to act on test results in a timely fashion. Clinicians perceive an improvement in patient care as a result of using an outpatient Electronic Medical Record system. Clinicians have higher opinions, however, of the effects of a Results Reporting system compared to an online charting and ordering system.This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Meta-analysis of 16 Randomized Controlled Trials to Evaluate Computer-Based Clinical Reminder Systems for Preventive Care in the Ambulatory SettingJournal of the American Medical Informatics Association, 1996
- Computerized patient records in primary care. Their role in mediating guideline-driven physician behavior changeArchives of Family Medicine, 1995
- Exploration and exploitation of clinical databasesInternational Journal of Bio-Medical Computing, 1995
- Acceptance and performance by clinicians using an ambulatory electronic medical record in an HMO.1995
- A clinical trial of a knowledge-based medical record.1995
- Effect of Computer-Based Alerts on the Treatment and Outcomes of Hospitalized PatientsArchives of internal medicine (1960), 1994
- Electronic communication between providers of primary and secondary care.BMJ, 1992
- Computerized Display of Past Test ResultsAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1987
- Why Doctors Don't Use Computers: Some Empirical FindingsJournal of the Royal Society of Medicine, 1986
- Reminders to Physicians from an Introspective Computer Medical RecordAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1984