RNs key to EHR improvement, says CIO
When it comes to nurses, a couple things go without saying. First, they're absolutely essential to good care delivery. Second -- and this follows from the first -- they're "very, very, very busy people," says David Holland.
"When you're in the hospital, I know physicians make a lot of decisions about your care, but it's really nurses who deliver your care," says Holland, vice president and CIO at Southern Illinois Healthcare, a three-hospital system based in Carbondale, Ill.
In Holland's case, the CIO stands for chief innovation officer, he says. "I not only have IT in our hospital, I have process improvement, all our Lean activities, etc."
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For SIH's nursing staff, as smart and dedicated as they were, it was becoming clear "we needed to have better processes, more consistencies in our standards of care, more compliance with agreed-upon and evidence-based process," he said.
"Our nurses, while they were doing a great job, they really were doing a lot from the seat of their pants, doing the best they could," said Holland. "One of the things we were looking at was doing events with our nursing team to create our standard processes and then build them into our MEDITECH system."
Southern Illinois Healthcare turned to Elsevier, whose nursing care plans could be built right into its electronic health record.
"There will be, embedded into the EHR, links out to training and documentation and education," said Holland. "So if you have a nurse that is doing a procedure with a patient that maybe they are doing very rarely, they can click and see information about it, maybe get a video about it, get that education right there, instead of going out and asking other people, 'How do I do this? I haven't done it in a while.'"
"People often say nurses are resistant (to IT)," said Michelle Troseth, RN, chief professional practice officer at Elsevier Clinical Solutions. "We come in and show, 'This is why it's important, and this is why the evidence-based tool that embedded in the MEDITECH is the way that it is.'"
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Most nurses choose the line of work because they care about caring for people, of course. By showing how proper documentation and process improvement tie into better care, nurses "actually get excited about it, because then it's not just about the technology," said Troseth. "And we really work with within the system, so we can have that patient story go consistently from nurse to nurse, from clinician to clinician."
At SIH, "one of the key things was that, in this process, IT stayed way in the background," said Holland.
Along the way, leadership was key. Happily, from the chief nursing officer on down, "my nursing leadership is just super excited," he said.