Abstract

BackgroundEighty-four thousand primary care physicians have received $1.3 billion in HITECH payments for EHR adoption. However, little is known about how this will impact primary care workload efficiency and the national primary care shortage. This study examines whether EHR is associated with increases in face time with the patient per visit and increases in the physician’s patient volume per week.MethodsWe used a nationally representative sample of 37,962 patient visits to 1470 primary care physicians during the pre-HITECH years 2006–2009 from the restricted-access version of the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey. Quantile regressions were used to estimate the effects of EHR use on patient face time per visit and physician’s patient volume per week at different points of the time and volume distributions.ResultsPrimary care physicians with EHR spend an extra 1.3 face time minutes per visit, or 1.5 extra hours per week. This is 34,000 extra hours of face time per week in the U.S. However, physician age matters. Among young physicians, EHR use is associated with a decline in weekly patient volume, while EHR use among older physicians is associated with an increase in volume, regardless of initial practice size. If younger physicians behaved like older physicians when adopting EHR, there would be 37,600 additional patient visits per week in the U.S., the equivalent of adding 500 more primary care physicians to the U.S. workforce.ConclusionEHR can enhance productivity/efficiency in primary care physician workloads.

Highlights

  • Eighty-four thousand primary care physicians have received $1.3 billion in HITECH payments for Electronic Health Records (EHRs) adoption

  • The raw data indicates that EHRs are associated with increases in the physician’s face time with the patient regardless of physician age, whereas the association between EHRs and patient volume varies across physician age

  • EHR use is associated with a decline in patient volume, while EHR use among older physicians is associated with an increase in volume

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Summary

Introduction

Eighty-four thousand primary care physicians have received $1.3 billion in HITECH payments for EHR adoption. A recent Senate report indicates that 16,000 additional primary care physicians are required to meet the current need, and the shortage is predicted to increase to 52,000 physicians by 2025, mainly due to the as the number of clinical guidelines increase for primary care in the shift away from specialty care, more time demands will be placed on primary care physicians. Primary care physicians have expressed this concern—38 % report not spending enough time with their patients during a typical office visit (Center for Studying Health System Change, 2008) [7]. This has not gone unnoticed by the patient.

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