Thursday, June 05, 2014

Another Sign The EHR Experiment is Producing Undesired (But Predictable) Results: ED EHRs Produce No Efficiency Gains

Adverse results that run counter to the industry meme of healthcare IT exceptionalism are coming fast and furious.  It's hard for me to keep up with it all.

In addition to my post today "EHR Exceptionalism Debunked: Care Quality Variances Among VA Hospitals Suggest the True Value of Health IT Has Been Grossly Exaggerated" (http://hcrenewal.blogspot.com/2014/06/ehr-exceptionalism-debunked-care.html), here's another.

I won't comment on this very much:

http://www.jwatch.org/na34646/2014/05/30/electronic-charting-less-efficient-paper-charting

May 30, 2014 

Is Electronic Charting Less Efficient Than Paper Charting?
Daniel J. Pallin, MD, MPH reviewing Ward MJ et al. Ann Emerg Med 2014 Jun.

Operational performance was similar before and after computerization at 23 community emergency departments.

The federal government has provided $17 billion in incentives to computerize healthcare. The potential benefits include improved error checking, decision support, better billing, and more data for research. However, some research has suggested that going paperless adversely affects productivity.

To further examine this issue, investigators measured operational efficiency 6 months before and 6 months after implementation of an electronic health record system at 23 community emergency departments. No significant differences between the two time points were found in all efficiency factors that were measured, including time to provider, lengths of stay, walkouts, patient satisfaction, patients seen per provider per hour, and significant return visits.

Citation(s):

Ward MJ et al. The effect of electronic health record implementation on community emergency department operational measures of performance. Ann Emerg Med 2014 Jun; 63:723. (http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.annemergmed.2013.12.019)

One might seek to get better results for their $17 billion than, at best, parity to paper.

Finally, the reader comments at that post suggest ED physicians are the ones helping foot the bill.  As one commenter put it:

"Most quality EM docs won't let a record slow their care up front--especially when quaility metrics are staring us down on time until seen or discharge. So we just chart later and go home later."

We as patients certainly should not find a development like that desirable.

Note that in my work as a hospital Chief Medical Informatics Officer (CMIO) I recommended simple document imaging solutions for risk-laden ED's (where charts are usually short) to capture and make the paper chart content available anywhere/anytime ... not full-blown digital electronic medical records systems.

-- SS

Most quality EM docs won't let a record slow their care up front--especially when quaility metrics are staring us down on time until seen or dischage. So we just chart later and go home later. - See more at: http://www.jwatch.org/na34646/2014/05/30/electronic-charting-less-efficient-paper-charting#sthash.WCiV8FQg.dpuf
Most quality EM docs won't let a record slow their care up front--especially when quaility metrics are staring us down on time until seen or dischage. So we just chart later and go home later. - See more at: http://www.jwatch.org/na34646/2014/05/30/electronic-charting-less-efficient-paper-charting#sthash.WCiV8FQg.dpuf
Most quality EM docs won't let a record slow their care up front--especially when quaility metrics are staring us down on time until seen or dischage. So we just chart later and go home later. - See more at: http://www.jwatch.org/na34646/2014/05/30/electronic-charting-less-efficient-paper-charting#sthash.WCiV8FQg.dpuf
Most quality EM docs won't let a record slow their care up front--especially when quaility metrics are staring us down on time until seen or dischage. So we just chart later and go home later. - See more at: http://www.jwatch.org/na34646/2014/05/30/electronic-charting-less-efficient-paper-charting#sthash.WCiV8FQg.dpuf"

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

The freedom from oversight enjoyed by the vendors of HIT devices has not equated to innovation, and the patients do not enjoy the neglect, nor do the doctors enjoy the poor usability and error promoting flaws.

It should be obvious by now that the vendors need oversight in order to innovate.