Prevalence and functionality of electronic health records in internal medicine continuity clinics.
Publication/Presentation Date
8-1-2010
Abstract
PURPOSE: Health information technology (HIT), particularly electronic health records (EHRs), will become universal in ambulatory practices, but the current roles and functions that HIT and EHRs play in the ambulatory clinic settings of internal medicine (IM) residents are unknown.
METHOD: The authors conducted a Web-based survey from July 2007 to January 2008 to ascertain HIT prevalence and functionality. Respondents were directors of one or more ambulatory clinics where IM residents completed any required outpatient training, as identified by directors of accredited U.S. IM residencies.
RESULTS: The authors identified 356 clinic directors from 264 accredited U.S. programs (70%); 221 directors (62%) completed the survey, representing 185 accredited programs (49%). According to responding directors, residents in 121 of 216 clinics (56%) had access to EHRs, residents in 147 of 219 clinics (67%) used some type of electronic data system (EDS) to manage patient information, and residents in 62 clinics (28% of 219 responding) used an EDS to generate lists of patients needing follow-up care. Compared with smaller IM training programs, programs with > or =50 trainees were more likely to have an EDS (67% versus 53%, P = .037), electronic prescription writer (57% versus 42%, P = .026), or EHR (63% versus 45%, P = .007).
CONCLUSIONS: Resident ambulatory clinics seem to have greater adoption of HIT and EHRs than practicing physicians' ambulatory offices. Ample room for improvement exists, however, as electronic systems with suboptimal patient data, limited functionality, and reliance on multiple (paper and electronic) systems all hinder residents' ability to perform important care coordination activities.
Volume
85
Issue
8
First Page
1369
Last Page
1377
ISSN
1938-808X
Published In/Presented At
Reddy SG, Babbott SF, Beasley BW, Nadkarni MM, Gertner EJ, Holmboe ES. Prevalence and functionality of electronic health records in internal medicine continuity clinics. Acad Med. 2010 Aug;85(8):1369-77. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0b013e3181df1903. PMID: 20453813.
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
20453813
Department(s)
Department of Medicine
Document Type
Article