Abstract

BackgroundIncreased investments are being made for electronic medical records (EMRs) in Canada. There is a need to learn from earlier EMR studies on their impact on physician practice in office settings. To address this need, we conducted a systematic review to examine the impact of EMRs in the physician office, factors that influenced their success, and the lessons learned.ResultsFor this review we included publications cited in Medline and CINAHL between 2000 and 2009 on physician office EMRs. Studies were included if they evaluated the impact of EMR on physician practice in office settings. The Clinical Adoption Framework provided a conceptual scheme to make sense of the findings and allow for future comparison/alignment to other Canadian eHealth initiatives.In the final selection, we included 27 controlled and 16 descriptive studies. We examined six areas: prescribing support, disease management, clinical documentation, work practice, preventive care, and patient-physician interaction. Overall, 22/43 studies (51.2%) and 50/109 individual measures (45.9%) showed positive impacts, 18.6% studies and 18.3% measures had negative impacts, while the remaining had no effect. Forty-eight distinct factors were identified that influenced EMR success. Several lessons learned were repeated across studies: (a) having robust EMR features that support clinical use; (b) redesigning EMR-supported work practices for optimal fit; (c) demonstrating value for money; (d) having realistic expectations on implementation; and (e) engaging patients in the process.ConclusionsCurrently there is limited positive EMR impact in the physician office. To improve EMR success one needs to draw on the lessons from previous studies such as those in this review.

Highlights

  • Increased investments are being made for electronic medical records (EMRs) in Canada

  • The need Increased investments are being made for electronic medical record (EMR) systems to improve physician practice in office settings in Canada

  • This paper describes a systematic review we conducted on EMR-supported physician practice in the office setting

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Summary

Introduction

Increased investments are being made for electronic medical records (EMRs) in Canada. There are systematic reviews on the use of information technology (IT) including EMRs in primary care and general practice settings These reviews covered topics in diabetes management [6], patient record quality [7,8], decision support tools [9], electronic communication [10], and provider performance and patient outcomes [11]. The shortcomings of these reviews are that they were mostly in specific topic areas based on controlled trials published before 2005 (except for [6,9] which were published in 2008) Some of these reviews had a mix of inpatient and outpatient settings, and included large Health Maintenance Organizations with EMRs that are integrated across multiple hospitals and ambulatory care clinics. There is a need to conduct an EMR review for office settings similar to those in Canada and be more inclusive of different evaluation approaches, covering multiple topic areas [15,16]

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