Jack Tsai1, Gary Bond. 1. Department of Psychology, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, Indiana, USA. jatsai@iupui.edu
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Medication documentation is a critical aspect of quality patient care. The current study examined whether electronic medical records provide medication documentation that is more complete and faster to retrieve than traditional paper records. METHOD: This study involves a comparison of archived paper medical records to recent electronic medical records through chart review. A convenient sample of three large community mental health centers in Indiana was used. Medical charts for 180 patients with schizophrenia were rated on a checklist composed of 16 items that was adapted from a national project. Documentation that existed before implementation of the electronic medical record system was compared with that after implementation at each of the three centers. The main outcome measures were completeness and retrieval time of medication documentation. RESULTS: Electronic medical records provided medication documentation that was more complete and faster to retrieve than paper records across all centers and within each center. On average, electronic medical records were 40% more complete and 20% faster to retrieve. CONCLUSION: Electronic records have potential to improve medication management for patients in mental health centers over traditional records. However, medication documentation for patients diagnosed with schizophrenia was found to be deficient in many areas, regardless of documentation format.
OBJECTIVE: Medication documentation is a critical aspect of quality patient care. The current study examined whether electronic medical records provide medication documentation that is more complete and faster to retrieve than traditional paper records. METHOD: This study involves a comparison of archived paper medical records to recent electronic medical records through chart review. A convenient sample of three large community mental health centers in Indiana was used. Medical charts for 180 patients with schizophrenia were rated on a checklist composed of 16 items that was adapted from a national project. Documentation that existed before implementation of the electronic medical record system was compared with that after implementation at each of the three centers. The main outcome measures were completeness and retrieval time of medication documentation. RESULTS: Electronic medical records provided medication documentation that was more complete and faster to retrieve than paper records across all centers and within each center. On average, electronic medical records were 40% more complete and 20% faster to retrieve. CONCLUSION: Electronic records have potential to improve medication management for patients in mental health centers over traditional records. However, medication documentation for patients diagnosed with schizophrenia was found to be deficient in many areas, regardless of documentation format.
Authors: Christopher R Larrison; Xiaoling Xiang; Mara Gustafson; Michael R Lardiere; Neil Jordan Journal: J Behav Health Serv Res Date: 2018-01 Impact factor: 1.505
Authors: Dana E Kozubal; Quincy M Samus; Aishat A Bakare; Carrilin C Trecker; Hei-Wah Wong; Huiying Guo; Jeffrey Cheng; Paul X Allen; Lawrence S Mayer; Kay R Jamison; Adam I Kaplin Journal: Int J Med Inform Date: 2012-12-21 Impact factor: 4.046
Authors: Bernhard Holzner; Johannes M Giesinger; Jakob Pinggera; Stefan Zugal; Felix Schöpf; Anne S Oberguggenberger; Eva M Gamper; August Zabernigg; Barbara Weber; Gerhard Rumpold Journal: BMC Med Inform Decis Mak Date: 2012-11-09 Impact factor: 2.796