| Literature DB >> 26459258 |
Alexandra T Strauss1, Diego A Martinez2, Andres Garcia-Arce3, Stephanie Taylor4, Candice Mateja5, Peter J Fabri6, Jose L Zayas-Castro3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Important barriers for widespread use of health information exchange (HIE) are usability and interface issues. However, most HIEs are implemented without performing a needs assessment with the end users, healthcare providers. We performed a user needs assessment for the process of obtaining clinical information from other health care organizations about a hospitalized patient and identified the types of information most valued for medical decision-making.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26459258 PMCID: PMC4603345 DOI: 10.1186/s12911-015-0207-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ISSN: 1472-6947 Impact factor: 2.796
Demographic and clinical factors of hospitalizations with at least one request for outside information
| No. (%) | |
|---|---|
| Female | 1061 (50.7) |
| Language preference | |
| English | 1949 (93.2) |
| Spanish | 95 (4.5) |
| Unknown/Other | 47 (2.3) |
| Marital status | |
| Single | 1361 (65.1) |
| Married | 652 (31.2) |
| Unknown/Other | 78 (3.7) |
| Primary care provider | 1235 (59.1) |
| Payer class | |
| Commercial | 627 (30) |
| Medicare | 817 (39.1) |
| Medicaid | 465 (22.2) |
| HCHCP | 137 (6.6) |
| Other | 45 (2.1) |
| Admission source | |
| Emergency room | 1921 (91.9) |
| Physician-referral | 84 (4) |
| Outside hospital | 84 (4) |
| Other | 2 (0.1) |
| Mean (SD) | |
| Age | 53.5 (17.3) |
| Length of stay | 6.7 (10) |
HCHCP Hillsborough Country Health Care Plan
Fig. 1Flow process chart of obtaining outside information. Abbreviations: OI, outside information
Fig. 2Simplified flow process chart of obtaining outside information from physician perspective
Summary of physician perceptions of current, pre-HIE use of outside information requested from outside hospitals
| Reasons for not requesting | Problems encountered |
|---|---|
| 1. Time | 1. Process |
| ● Outside information is too old | ● Need to re-request |
| ● Physician assumes the OI request process takes too long | ● Delay in sending or scanning outside information after work hours |
| ● Emergent situations | ● Transitions-of-care communication problems |
| ● Brief Hospital stay | ● Problems with outside information transfer patients |
| ● Do not receive any outside information | |
| ● OI comes too late | |
| ● Delay waiting for imaging to be loaded from CD | |
| ● Unaware of where outside information is in the process or if it has arrived | |
| 2. Relevance | 2. Information |
| ● Current admission unrelated to outside information | ● Unhelpful physician or nursing notes |
| ● Unnecessary to request outside information based on clinical expertise | ● Difficulty finding useful information in unorganized and abundant amount of outside information |
| ● Skepticism of imaging or culture reads from outside facility | |
| 3. Patient | |
| ● Patient or family is good historian and record keeper | |
| ● Patient does not know where to request outside information from |
OI outside information
Document types received from outside health care facilities
| Document type | Number of documents received (%) |
|---|---|
| Medical record | 1637 (78) |
| Imaging | 383 (18) |
| History and physical | 255 (12) |
| Note | 206 (10) |
| Discharge summary | 164 (8) |
| Electrocardiogram | 153 (7) |
| Consultation | 151 (7) |
Fig. 3Response distribution to the question “In which specific (general) clinical situations would timely OI influence your medical decisions?” Abbreviations: ICU, intensive care unit
Fig. 4Response distribution to the question “In which specific (test type) clinical situations would timely OI influence your medical decisions?” Abbreviations: MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; EKG, electrocardiogram; CT, computed tomography
Fig. 5Response distribution to the question “In which specific (health condition) clinical situations would timely OI influence your medical decisions?” Abbreviations: ICU, intensive care unit; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; CHF, congestive heart failure
Design recommendations for health information exchange in an Internal Medicine Department in a public hospital
| Design recommendations |
|---|
| 1. Allow keyword search functionality in OI |
| 2. Provide the telephone number of the OI source for follow up questions |
| 3. Provide the list of previous medications for medication reconciliation |
| 4. Facilitate remote access to patients’ medical records |
| 5. Provide computer screens that facilitate parallel tasking while reviewing documents electronically |
| 6. Visual indicators for when OI is potentially relevant to specific diagnoses |
| 7. Provide 1-click access to imaging, echocardiograms, bacterial cultures, cardiac catheterizations and CTs results (not only reports) |
| 8. Prioritize OI access to patients with acute cardiac issues, chest pain, infection, cancer, and kidney injury |
| 9. Prioritize OI access for hospital transfers and ICU patients |
OI outside information, CT computerized tomography, ICU intensive care unit