Literature DB >> 14687289

'Rage against the machine?': nurses' and midwives' experiences of using Computerized Patient Information Systems for clinical information.

Philip Darbyshire1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Computerized Patient Information Systems (CPIS) are used increasingly in health care, yet few studies have asked clinicians to describe their experiences of using these systems and what they mean to their practice and patient care. AIMS AND
OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to explore clinical nurses' and midwives' perceptions and understandings of computerized information systems in everyday practice. The objective was to provide a detailed and faithful account of clinicians' experiences of using such systems.
DESIGN: A qualitative design was used, based upon interpretive phenomenology.
METHODS: A total of 13 focus groups involving 53 practitioners was conducted in hospitals across five Australian states with nurses and midwives from a wide range of practice settings. The participants ranged from Level 1 RNs to Clinical Nurse Consultants and nurses with an IT project management role.
RESULTS: This study focuses specifically on clinicians' experiences of using CPIS to manage clinical information. Clinicians' experiences were characterized by digital disappointment rather than electronic efficiencies. Clinicians reported generally that computerization had neither enhanced their clinical practice nor patient care, nor had it improved patient outcomes.
CONCLUSIONS: Participants' experiences were predominantly negative and mostly critical of CPIS and their: perceived inability to capture 'real nursing', difficulty in use, incompatibilities, non-responsiveness and irrelevance to patient care and meaningful clinical outcomes. RELEVANCE TO CLINICAL PRACTICE: Technological 'solutions' to health care problems are endlessly seductive and easily entrance policy and decision makers. Computerization will continue to impact upon clinical practice and cannot be wished away. Today's computerized systems may have been developed with scant regard for clinician end-users. A crucial issue facing everyone in health informatics is how point-of-care systems can be developed in ways that involve clinicians meaningfully and which recognize and respond to the complexity and subtlety of the world of nursing and midwifery practice.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2004        PMID: 14687289     DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2702.2003.00823.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Nurs        ISSN: 0962-1067            Impact factor:   3.036


  16 in total

1.  Emotional aspects of computer-based provider order entry: a qualitative study.

Authors:  Dean F Sittig; Michael Krall; Joann Kaalaas-Sittig; Joan S Ash
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  2005-05-19       Impact factor: 4.497

2.  Connecting public health IT systems with enacted work: report of an ethnographic study.

Authors:  Anne McNaughton Turner; Judy Ramey; Sally Lee
Journal:  AMIA Annu Symp Proc       Date:  2008-11-06

3.  Capturing information needs of care providers to support knowledge sharing and distributed decision making.

Authors:  M Rogers; L Zach; Y An; P Dalrymple
Journal:  Appl Clin Inform       Date:  2012-01-04       Impact factor: 2.342

4.  Challenges and facilitators to adoption of a point-of-care electronic health record in home care.

Authors:  Paulina S Sockolow; Kathryn H Bowles; Marguerite C Adelsberger; Jesse L Chittams; Cindy Liao
Journal:  Home Health Care Serv Q       Date:  2014

5.  Transforming user needs into functional requirements for an antibiotic clinical decision support system: explicating content analysis for system design.

Authors:  T J Bright
Journal:  Appl Clin Inform       Date:  2013-12-25       Impact factor: 2.342

Review 6.  Tensions and paradoxes in electronic patient record research: a systematic literature review using the meta-narrative method.

Authors:  Trisha Greenhalgh; Henry W W Potts; Geoff Wong; Pippa Bark; Deborah Swinglehurst
Journal:  Milbank Q       Date:  2009-12       Impact factor: 4.911

7.  Comparison of user groups' perspectives of barriers and facilitators to implementing electronic health records: a systematic review.

Authors:  Carrie Anna McGinn; Sonya Grenier; Julie Duplantie; Nicola Shaw; Claude Sicotte; Luc Mathieu; Yvan Leduc; France Légaré; Marie-Pierre Gagnon
Journal:  BMC Med       Date:  2011-04-28       Impact factor: 8.775

8.  Development and evaluation of nursing user interface screens using multiple methods.

Authors:  Sookyung Hyun; Stephen B Johnson; Peter D Stetson; Suzanne Bakken
Journal:  J Biomed Inform       Date:  2009-05-19       Impact factor: 6.317

9.  Drug information resources used by nurse practitioners and collaborating physicians at the point of care in Nova Scotia, Canada: a survey and review of the literature.

Authors:  Andrea L Murphy; Mark Fleming; Ruth Martin-Misener; Ingrid S Sketris; Mary MacCara; David Gass
Journal:  BMC Nurs       Date:  2006-07-06

10.  Nurses' perceptions of usefulness of nursing information system: module of electronic medical record for patient care in two university hospitals of iran.

Authors:  Mehdi Kahouei; Hassan Baba Mohammadi; Hesamedin Askari Majdabadi; Mahnaz Solhi; Zeinab Parsania; Panoe Said Roghani; Mehri Firozeh
Journal:  Mater Sociomed       Date:  2014-02-20
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