Abstract

BackgroundDespite a substantial increase in the adoption of electronic medical records (EMRs) in primary health care settings, the use of advanced EMR features is limited. Several studies have identified both barriers and facilitating factors that influence primary care physicians’ (PCPs) use of advanced EMR features and the maturation of their EMR use. The purpose of this study is to explore and identify the factors that impact PCPs’ mature use of EMRs.MethodsA systematic review was conducted in accordance with the Cochrane Handbook. The MEDLINE, Embase, and PsycINFO electronic databases were searched from 1946 to June 13, 2019. Two independent reviewers screened the studies for eligibility; to be included, studies had to address factors influencing PCPs’ mature use of EMRs. A narrative synthesis was conducted to collate study findings and to report on patterns identified across studies. The quality of the studies was also appraised.ResultsOf the 1893 studies identified, 14 were included in this study. Reported factors that influenced PCPs’ mature use of EMRs fell into one of the following 5 categories: technology, people, organization, resources, and policy. Concerns about the EMR system’s functionality, lack of physician awareness of EMR functionality, limited physician availability to learn more about EMRs, the habitual use of successfully completing clinical tasks using only basic EMR features, business-oriented organizational objectives, lack of vendor training, limited resource availability, and lack of physician readiness were reported as barriers to PCPs’ mature use of EMRs. The motivation of physicians, user satisfaction, coaching and peer mentoring, EMR experience, gender, physician perception, transition planning for changes in roles and work processes, team-based care, adequate technical support and training, sharing resources, practices affiliated with an integrated delivery system, financial incentives, and policies to increase EMR use all had a favorable impact on PCPs’ use of advanced EMR features.ConclusionsBy using a narrative synthesis to synthesize the evidence, we identified interrelated factors influencing the mature use of EMRs by PCPs. The findings underline the need to provide adequate training and policies that facilitate the mature use of EMRs by PCPs.Trial registration: PROSPERO CRD42019137526.

Highlights

  • Despite a substantial increase in the adoption of electronic medical records (EMRs) in primary health care settings, the use of advanced Electronic Medical Record (EMR) features is limited

  • This study found that physicians perceived that automaticity in advanced EMR features resulted in errors, where participants (> 60%) reported errors such as typos, adding information to the wrong patient chart, and unintentionally selecting an erroneous item from a scroll-down list [45]

  • This study found that physicians who perceived that neither individual nor organizational performance improvements were due to their use of an EMR system had a more limited understanding of their EMR system’s functionality, clinical functionalities, compared to physicians who perceived EMR usage as having a positive influence overall on both their individual performance and their clinic’s

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Despite a substantial increase in the adoption of electronic medical records (EMRs) in primary health care settings, the use of advanced EMR features is limited. Several studies have identified both barriers and facilitating factors that influence primary care physicians’ (PCPs) use of advanced EMR features and the maturation of their EMR use. The purpose of this study is to explore and identify the factors that impact PCPs’ mature use of EMRs. As the population ages, the prevalence of chronic disease increases, and primary health care needs are becoming increasingly complex to support [1]. The HITECH act defined “meaningful use” as the use of certified EMR technology in a meaningful manner (e.g., electronic prescribing) to ensure that the certified EMR improved the quality of care [8]. This study defines maturity as the maturation of the user’s skill set and clinical processes in using a health information system, rather than the maturity of a product itself (i.e., type of features implemented in an EMR) [13]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call