EHRs can improve patient safety - if they're optimized well
Contrary to current levels of frustration among clinicians and other users, EHRs hold the power to positively impact patient care. But that takes a more thoughtful and phased approach than simply implementing a new electronic health record platform or upgrading to the latest version.
Instead, hospitals should proceed at a realistic and reasonable pace when rolling out baseline functions, turning on features that have matured since the initial installation, and gradually optimizing the overall functionality and user experience if they hope to achieve gains in quality and performance.
Consider the evolution of EHRs: Between 2008 (when the tech was relatively new) and 2013 the electronic records software went from being linked to an 11 percent higher 30-day mortality rate to being associated with a .09 percent lower rate against the same metric.
[Also: Next-gen EHRs: What will the future look like?]
Those are the major findings of a study published in Health Affairs. But what fueled the about-face and how did hospitals and technology vendors turn the negative into a positive? Patience and pacing.
Don't expect EHRs to evolve overnight
“Healthcare is complex, EHRs are complex,” said Julia Adler-Milstein, an associate professor of medicine and director of the Clinical Informatics and Improvement Research Center at the University of California San Francisco School of Medicine. “The two together are extremely complex and this idea that we put the two together and the next day healthcare would get better was naive. Most other industries it took a decade for IT to really transform.”
Researchers looked at national Medicare hospital claims for 3,249 non-federal, acute care hospitals from 2008 to 2013, since national data only started in 2008 and not that many hospitals had a lot of EHR functionality before then. They also used data for 2014 from the American Hospital Association Annual Survey Database, including its Information Technology Supplement. They then created a data set that contained annual measures of hospital EHR adoption, characteristics, and mortality performance.
[Also: Human factors need to play bigger role in EHR design and implementation, AMA says]
But they couldn’t just ask whether the EHR worked or not. More specific information was needed. So they analyzed how many baseline functions each hospital initially adopted, looked at how its EHR use and optimization progressed over time (also known as maturation), and examined the pace at which new functions were adopted.
“It’s rare for hospitals to go fully paper to fully digital. Most often, new functions are added over time. So the pace at which that happened is the third component. On the one hand, there could be an argument for moving quickly as you can to a fully digital environment because there are some risks to being partly digital and parlty paper. But on the other hand you hear a lot about change fatigue and how much can an organization take on. That’s why that third piece was interesting too,” Adler Milstein said.
Indeed, as the system and its users’ adeptness at navigating the software interfaces progressed over time, study results showed that upturn to a .09 percent lower mortality rate. Logically, adding new baseline functions over time was also linked to lower mortality rates.
Why pacing new EHR functionality is critical
Average adopters, meaning those that had a baseline adoption close to the average rate of 5 functions, fared better than those hospitals that didn’t adopt any, with .67 fewer deaths per 100 admissions.
The takeaway here is that hospitals and the people who work in and run them should expect performance-related gains from EHR adoption to take time. Those gains can be augmented when coupled with robust EHR support and EHR-enabled quality improvement efforts, and this should inform how many functions are adopted at first, how many are added each year, and the expectations that are reasonable to have for gauging results along the way.
“It is possible that starting with many functions or adding many new functions could have the unintended consequence of harming performance, as a result of change fatigue or diversion of attention away from more critical priorities,” the study said.
Adler-Milstein added that it is also crucial to make sure you are constantly improving, not viewing the EHR adoption as one time thing that can be done before moving on to the next IT project.
“It’s really a tool that makes you think about how you do everything in the hospital and you need to continue to improve the EHR itself and how you deliver care. Don’t shy away from continuing to add,” she explained. “Continue to optimize what you have and continue towards full digitization. But remember it’s not the technology that’s going to do it. It’s the organization that has to figure out how to use the technology in a beneficial way.”
Twitter: @BethJSanborn
Email the writer: beth.sanborn@himssmedia.com