Abstract

Pressures to contain health care costs, personalize patient care, use big data, and to enhance health care quality have highlighted the need for integration of evidence at the point of care. The application of evidence-based medicine (EBM) has great promise in the era of electronic health records (EHRs) and health technology. The most successful integration of evidence into EHRs has been complex decision tools that trigger at a critical point of the clinical visit and include patient specific recommendations. The objective of this viewpoint paper is to investigate why the incorporation of complex CDS tools into the EMR is equally complex and continues to challenge health service researchers and implementation scientists. Poor adoption and sustainability of EBM guidelines and CDS tools at the point of care have persisted and continue to document low rates of usage. The barriers cited by physicians include efficiency, perception of usefulness, information content, user interface, and over-triggering. Building on the traditional EHR implementation frameworks, we review keys strategies for successful CDSs: (1) the quality of the evidence, (2) the potential to reduce unnecessary care, (3) ease of integrating evidence at the point of care, (4) the evidence’s consistency with clinician perceptions and preferences, (5) incorporating bundled sets or automated documentation, and (6) shared decision making tools. As EHRs become commonplace and insurers demand higher quality and evidence-based care, better methods for integrating evidence into everyday care are warranted. We have outlined basic criteria that should be considered before attempting to integrate evidenced-based decision support tools into the EHR.

Highlights

  • Trends in Electronic health record (EHR) adoption overall have been driven by significant increases in physician adoption of specific computerized capabilities to meet Meaningful Use objectives

  • Physician adoption of EHR technology to engage with patients and their families has substantially increased

  • In 2012, half or more of physicians had the capability to meet each of 12 Meaningful Use Core objectives

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Summary

Immunization registries data submission

-- Data not collected *Significantly different from reference year 2009 (p < 0.05). †Significantly different from reference year 2011 (p < 0.05). In 2012, over 6 in 10 physicians had capability to use computerized provider order entry for lab orders and nearly three-quarters had capability to record electronic notes in patient records. This represents 66% and 68% growth, respectively, since 2009. In 2012, over half of physicians had the capability to meet Meaningful Use objectives of providing patients with clinical summaries after each visit (56%) and electronic copies of their health information (51%). Physician adoption of EHR technology to meet selected Meaningful Use objectives has increased significantly since HITECH started. Details on the full set of Meaningful Use objectives for Stages 1 and 2 are published elsewhere [1,2,3,4]

Data Source and Methods
Findings
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