This blog is totally independent, unpaid and has only three major objectives.
The first is to inform readers of news and happenings in the e-Health domain, both here in Australia and world-wide.
The second is to provide commentary on e-Health in Australia and to foster improvement where I can.
The third is to encourage discussion of the matters raised in the blog so hopefully readers can get a balanced view of what is really happening and what successes are being achieved.
Quote Of The Year
Timeless Quotes - Sadly The Late Paul Shetler - "Its not Your Health Record it's a Government Record Of Your Health Information"
or
H. L. Mencken - "For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong."
Friday, September 10, 2021
A Somewhat Interesting Study OF EHR Use and Burnout In Australia. Maybe Worth A Browse.
The
inability of doctors and nurses to properly use electronic record-keeping
systems remains the biggest challenge to how well the systems perform across
Australia, new research has found.
Over the past few years, all states and
territories have moved to some form of electronic medical record system (EMR)
to replace old paper records.
The
first large-scale study into the use of EMRs across the country has found
smaller venues, such as GP clinics, are integrating the systems better than
larger facilities, such as hospitals, which are struggling with a
one-size-fits-all approach.
Lead author Sheree Lloyd, from Griffith
University’s School of Applied Psychology, said problems experienced with EMRs
contributed to fatigue and burnout in health staff, as well as more errors.
“[Governments]
have made huge investments in these electronic medical record systems, and poor
usability prevents our hospital and health systems from utilising their full
benefit,” Dr Lloyd said.
“Usability
must be considered a primary feature [of EMRs] because we’ve got a workforce
that is already burnt out, stressed and fatigued.”
The
study, which was led by Griffith University in collaboration with Monash
University, the Royal Melbourne Hospital, the University of Wollongong, and the
Australasian Institute of Digital Health, found doctors in general practice and
other primary-care facilities expressed greater satisfaction with EMRs compared
to nurses.
While
that was flipped in the hospital sector, where nurses were more satisfied than
doctors, overall, the satisfaction and take-up levels were lower in hospitals
than in primary care.
Co-author
Chris Bain, a professor of practice in digital health at Monash University,
said Australia needed to learn the lessons that had already been worked through
overseas, especially in the United States.
A National Survey of EMR
Usability: Comparisons between medical and nursing professions in the hospital
and primary care sectors in Australia and Finland
• Usability can be measured in the
Australian context using the NuHISS developed by Finnish researchers.
• Impressions differ between nurses and
medical professionals in relation to EMR
usability.
• Impressions vary within professional
groups and across sectors in the Australian context.
• Comparisons between countries are
difficult as contexts where clinicians practice and EMR systems differ.
Abstract
Background
Electronic Medical Record
Systems (EMRs) are now part of nursing and medical professionals daily work in
the acute and primary care sectors in Australia. Usability is an important
factor in their successful adoption and impacts upon clinical workflow, safety
and quality, communication, and collaboration. This study replicates a
significant body of work conducted by Finnish researchers applying a usability
focused survey to understand medical and nursing professionals’ experiences in
the Australian context. As we implement EMRs across health systems, their
usability and design to support clinicians to effectively deliver and document
care, is essential.
Methods
We conducted an
observational study using a cross sectional survey, the National
Usability-Focused HIS Scale (NuHISS) developed and validated by Finnish
researchers. For this study 13 usability statements collected clinician
impressions of EMRs related to technical quality, ease of use, benefits, and
collaboration. We report the responses from medical and nursing professionals
working in clinical practice settings in Australia, including primary care and
hospital sectors in 2020.
Results
Nursing and medical
professionals have different experiences with EMR usability. This depends on
the sector they work in and the usability feature measured. In our sample,
technical quality features were more positively experienced by doctors in the
primary care sector than nurses as well as ease of obtaining patient
information and prevention of errors. In the hospital sector nurses experiences
with EMRs were more positive with respect to support for routine task
completion, learnability, ease of obtaining patient information and entry of
patient data.
Conclusions
The NuHISS is a suitable
tool for measuring the usability experiences of Australian clinicians and the
EMRs utilised. Differences in usability experiences were noted between
professional groups and sectors. A focus on the usability perspectives of
clinicians when enhancing or developing EMR solutions is advocated.
Problems with electronic medical record
systems (EMRs) contribute to fatigue, burnout and increased errors, according
to a study on EMR usability in Australia.
The study, led by Griffith University, captured views from medical, nursing and
allied health professionals across the acute, primary and community care
sectors. It found that nursing and medical professionals have differing
experiences depending on where they work.
Results showed technical and quality features
were more positively experienced by doctors in the primary care sector than
nurses, as well as ease of obtaining patient information and prevention of
errors.
In the hospital sector, nurses’ experiences
with EMRs were more positive with regards to support for routine task
completion, learnability, ease of obtaining patient information and entry of
patient data.
Medical
professional respondents working in the hospital sector were less satisfied
with usability features than their primary care counterparts (routine task
completion, prevention of errors, medication mistakes, patient data).
“Usability
features of information exchange and collaboration for clinicians across
services and with patients is critical to reduce complications such as missed
care, medication errors, compliance and re-presentation,’’ said Dr Sheree Lloyd
from Griffith University’s School of Applied Psychology.
“As
well as the likelihood of increased errors, problems with EMRs can lead to
fatigue and burnout.
“In
the middle of a global pandemic, now more than ever we need to have a digitised
system that is effective and easy to use for both medical and nursing
professionals across sectors, but what we have found is that most EMRs have
been designed as data collection tools rather than collaboration tools.
“In
addition, most EMR systems used in Australian hospitals were developed in the
US and may not be aligned to the workflows and practices of the Australian
healthcare system.”
Another
factor the researchers found that may have impeded usability was respondents
being largely older, more experienced clinicians who, prior to EMR
implementation, were likely expert users of paper-based record systems.
“While
this varies from state to state, comprehensive EMR systems in hospitals have
tended to be implemented later than those in the primary and community care
sector,’’ said Dr Chris Bain, a Professor of Practice in Digital Health at
Monash University.
“EMRs
have traditionally targeted the role of doctors and have been designed from a
biomedical perspective, but now there’s much more emphasis on a collaborative
approach to health and wellbeing with a variety of clinicians providing medical
care to patients,’’ he said.
This
study was based on a large-scale Finnish study to understand medical and
nursing professionals’ experiences in the Australian context. The research team
is hoping to repeat the study in 2022 to measure changes in usability and to
gain a more complete picture of clinician concerns.
I have to point out that it looks
like the study was conducted in peak Wave 1 COVID19 pandemic so discussion of
issues like stress and burnout might be hard to interpret!
I am also sightly bemused by the
Finnish connection. Surely we have user interface and usability experts in
Australia?
Also, other than grumbling that full
text of the article is not freely available, I think it is vital to point out
how different hospital and GP based systems are, in both purpose and intent, which
seems to make comparative comments tricky.
Overall, when I finished reading
what is available, I was left wondering just what this study added and given GP
and Hospital EMR have been in use for years just what as desired as an outcome.
What do others think?
David
4 comments:
Bernard Robertson-Dunn
said...
This is worth a weekend read, it's quite long but relevant to the subject matter of this blog.
Three numbers that matter: 62%, 40% and 15c The Medical Republic By Jeremy Knibbs https://medicalrepublic.com.au/three-numbers-that-matter-62-40-and-15c/53379
At least part of it discusses "eScripts versus the My Health Record"
To summarise the discussion
"Forget the My Health Record – no one uses it.
There isn’t really a reason for most stakeholders to use it. It isn’t facilitating useful information exchange at the right place at the right time with the right people.
Excellent article, so refreshing to read the truth.
It begs the question: How much longer will Dr Brendan Murphy and his Health Minister Greg Hunt continue spending $400 Million per annum on this failed extravagance?
Which would you rather have, Digital Health or a well functioning ambulance service?
The ambos asked me to come out of retirement. Here’s why I said no https://www.smh.com.au/national/the-ambos-asked-me-to-come-out-of-retirement-here-s-why-i-said-no-20210912-p58qyp.html
I wonder what the Federal Department of Health's policy is on ambulance service?
Probably their usual getout when it suits them - it's a state matter. But health records aren't?
4 comments:
This is worth a weekend read, it's quite long but relevant to the subject matter of this blog.
Three numbers that matter: 62%, 40% and 15c
The Medical Republic
By Jeremy Knibbs
https://medicalrepublic.com.au/three-numbers-that-matter-62-40-and-15c/53379
At least part of it discusses "eScripts versus the My Health Record"
To summarise the discussion
"Forget the My Health Record – no one uses it.
There isn’t really a reason for most stakeholders to use it. It isn’t facilitating useful information exchange at the right place at the right time with the right people.
The Rx exchanges are."
Excellent article, so refreshing to read the truth.
It begs the question: How much longer will Dr Brendan Murphy and his Health Minister Greg Hunt continue spending $400 Million per annum on this failed extravagance?
Pity the critical messages are buried and lost in a forrest of rambling verbosity.
Which would you rather have, Digital Health or a well functioning ambulance service?
The ambos asked me to come out of retirement. Here’s why I said no
https://www.smh.com.au/national/the-ambos-asked-me-to-come-out-of-retirement-here-s-why-i-said-no-20210912-p58qyp.html
I wonder what the Federal Department of Health's policy is on ambulance service?
Probably their usual getout when it suits them - it's a state matter. But health records aren't?
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