| Literature DB >> 25600508 |
Yeona Jang1, Michel A Lortie, Steven Sanche.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The use of electronic health records (EHR) in clinical settings is considered pivotal to a patient-centered health care delivery system. However, uncertainty in cost recovery from EHR investments remains a significant concern in primary care practices.Entities:
Keywords: ROI indicator; cost recovery from EHR implementation; physician satisfaction with EHR; primary care practices; return on investment in electronic health records
Year: 2014 PMID: 25600508 PMCID: PMC4288109 DOI: 10.2196/medinform.3631
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Med Inform
Basic statistics on the size of a primary care clinic in the study.
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| Average | SD | Median | Minimum | Maximum | |
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| Pre-EHR period | 3.4 | 2.6 | 3.0 | 1.0 | 8.5 |
| Post-EHR period | 3.6 | 2.4 | 3.0 | 0.8 | 8.0 | |
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| Pre-EHR period | 3.4 | 2.9 | 2.8 | 1.0 | 12.0 |
| Post-EHR period | 4.2 | 3.1 | 3.0 | 0.9 | 12.0 | |
Percent changes in clinic revenues, net revenues, and clinician FTEs between the pre-EHR and post-EHR periods.
| Clinic # | Percent change between the pre-EHR and post-EHR periods (in ascending order by percent change in number of clinician FTEs), % | ||
| In number of clinician FTEs | In clinic revenue | In clinic’s net revenue | |
| Clinic 1 | -29 | 23 | 23 |
| Clinic 2 | -20 | -28 | 22 |
| Clinic 3 | -14 | 27 | 4 |
| Clinic 4 | -2 | 29 | 26 |
| Clinic 7 | 0 | 55 | 9 |
| Clinic 5 | 0 | 50 | 63 |
| Clinic 9 | 0 | 33 | 8 |
| Clinic 10 | 0 | 31 | 28 |
| Clinic 8 | 0 | 23 | 28 |
| Clinic 11 | 0 | 19 | 16 |
| Clinic 6 | 0 | 3 | 15 |
| Clinic 12 | 0 | -10 | 20 |
| Clinic 13 | 0 | -15 | -30 |
| Clinic 14 | 10 | 120 | 116 |
| Clinic 15 | 47 | 223 | 227 |
| Clinic 16 | 53 | 103 | 98 |
| Clinic 17 | 329 | 603 | 845 |
| Average | 22 | 76 | 89 |
Figure 1Average percent changes in active patient count, clinician FTE count, clinical support staff FTE count, clinic revenue, and clinic net revenue between the pre-EHR and post-EHR periods.
Figure 2Correlations (r-values): clinic net revenue, clinic revenue, active patient count, clinician FTE count, and clinical support staff FTE count.
Figure 3Average percent changes in a clinic’s operational efficiency and financial performance between the pre-EHR and post-EHR periods.
Figure 4Correlations (r-values): clinic net revenue, clinic revenue, active patient count, clinician FTE count, clinical support staff FTE count, active-patients-to-clinician-FTE ratio, and active-patients-to-clinical-support-staff-FTE ratio.
Summary of statistical analysis of change in a clinic’s operational efficiency and financial performance between between the pre-EHR and post-EHR periods
| Percent changes between the pre-EHR and post-EHR periods | Average | SD | Median | M | Sign test, | |||||
| Percent change in clinic net revenue | 89% | 203% | 23% | 7.5 | <.001 | |||||
| Percent change in the number of active patients | 56% | 119% | 10% | 5.0 | .006 | |||||
| Percent change in active-patients-to-clinician-FTE ratio | 27% | 53% | 9% | 6.5 | <.001 | |||||
| Percent change in the number of clinician FTEs | 22% | 82% | 0% | 0.0 | 1.00 | |||||
| Percent change in the number of clinical support staff FTEs | 37% | 75% | 0% | 3.0 | .07 | |||||
| Percent change in active-patients-to-clinical-support-staff-FTE ratio | 10% | 29% | 4% | 2.5 | .277 | |||||
Impact of EHR on clinic practices identified by study participants.
| Categories | Participant comments |
| A. Impact of EHR on a clinic’s ability to manage results | “We receive results electronically and can graph them; graphs help ‘engage’ the patient.” |
| “Direct to physician lab results has very positive effect on physician efficiency and patient care.” | |
| B. Impact of EHR on a clinic’s ability to seek out specific information from patient records | “Complete chart is always available, anywhere which affects patient safety and means better care.” |
| “Integration of information for referral requests is a great benefit.” | |
| “Billing codes are up-to-date. (And) billing is automatic by the doctor inside encounter note, which simplifies billing and is easier to manage reconciliation. No missed billing opportunities.” | |
| C. Impact of EHR on a clinic’s ability to prepare patient encounter | “Review of patient information prior to encounter is greatly facilitated.” |
| “Easier to prepare for encounter; maintenance of problem list /summary is much easier” | |
| “Immediate access to patient information—no lost files.” |
Significant linear regression results of the outcome “break-even point” with explanatory variables (break-even point was log-transformed to approach a Normal distribution).
| Explanatory variable | Variable values | Regression coefficient | Standard error of coefficient |
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| (a) Age of EHR: Months between Jan 1, 2013, and EHR implementation start date | Number of months | 0.03 | 0.01 | .049 | .64 |
| (b) e-Prescriptions complying with national standards | 0 (No) to 1 (Yes) | -1.32 | 0.34 | .006 | .50 |
| (c) Extent to which EHR complies to national standards | Continuous (from 0 to 10) | -0.19 | 0.07 | .038 | .54 |
| (d) Process change: Use of flow sheets | 0 (No) to 1 (Yes) | -1.29 | 0.46 | .022 | .68 |
EHR functionalities and utilization reported during the study period.
| EHR functionalities | % of clinics answering in the affirmative | |
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| Alternative presentation formats for clinical information | 100.0 |
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| Support for guideline-based data collection and treatment | 94.1 |
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| Support for multiple platform access | 88.2 |
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| Support for context sensitive alerts, warnings, and guidance | 70.6 |
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| Clinical notes capture in narrative form | 23.5 |
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| List of all medications taken by an individual patient | 100.0 |
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| Provide patients with clinical summaries for each visit | 88.2 |
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| List of all laboratory results for an individual patient | 88.2 |
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| List of patients by diagnosis (eg, diabetes or cancer) | 82.4 |
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| List of patients who are due or overdue for tests or preventive care | 76.5 |
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| List of all patients taking a particular medication | 76.5 |
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| List of patients by laboratory result (eg, HbA1C>9.0) | 52.3 |
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| Clinicians receive a reminder for guideline-based interventions and/or screening tests | 58.8 |
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| Clinicians receive an alert or prompt to provide patients with test results | 41.2 |
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| Patients are sent reminder notices when it is time for regular preventive or follow-up care | 35.3 |
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| All laboratory tests ordered are tracked until results reach clinicians | 29.4 |
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| Electronic prescribing of medication | 93.3 |
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| Electronic prompts about a potential problem with drug dose or drug interaction | 87.5 |
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| Electronic receipt of laboratory results integrated into the EHR system (not scanned) | 62.5 |
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| Electronic ordering of laboratory tests | 43.8 |
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| Electronic referring to specialists | 37.5 |
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| electronic transferring of prescriptions to a pharmacy | 6.7 |
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| Electronic exchange outside practice: patient clinical summaries | 25.0 |
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| Electronic exchange outside practice: laboratory and diagnostic tests | 18.8 |
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| Access alcohol consumption advice online | 11.8 |
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| Access advice for informal caregivers online | 11.8 |
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| Email about a medical question or concern | 11.8 |
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| Access dietary advice online | 11.8 |
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| Access advice on physical activity online | 11.8 |
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| Access advice on self-management of chronic conditions online | 11.8 |
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| Access smoking cessation advice online | 11.8 |
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| Request appointments online | 5.9 |
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| View a list of medications (current and past) online | 5.9 |
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| View other components of their chart (current and past) online | 0.0 |
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| View medical imaging results (current and past) online | 0.0 |
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| Request refills for prescriptions online | 0.0 |
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| View test results (current and past) online | 0.0 |
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| Diagnoses are coded using international standards | 94.1 |
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| Medications and pharmacological profiles are coded to national standards | 82.4 |
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| Patient records are supported by standards-based data migration technology | 50.0 |
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| ePrescriptions comply with national standards | 52.9 |
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| Patient Identifier is based on national or jurisdictional standard | 58.8 |
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| Patient Identifier is supported by aliasing technology to achieve positive ID across systems | 37.5 |
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| Findings are coded using international standards | 58.8 |
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| Communications with other clinics and institutions use international standards | 31.3 |
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| Investigations, referrals, and imaging requests make use of order tracking technology | 35.3 |
Figure 5Future research: investigate the relationship between return on EHR investment and clinical benefits realization from EHR implementation.