Literature DB >> 28124443

An Ethnographic Study of Health Information Technology Use in Three Intensive Care Units.

Myles Leslie1, Elise Paradis2, Michael A Gropper3, Simon Kitto4, Scott Reeves5, Peter Pronovost6,7.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To identify the impact of a full suite of health information technology (HIT) on the relationships that support safety and quality among intensive care unit (ICU) clinicians. DATA SOURCES: A year-long comparative ethnographic study of three academic ICUs was carried out. A total of 446 hours of observational data was collected in the form of field notes. A subset of these observations-134 hours-was devoted to job-shadowing individual clinicians and conducting a time study of their HIT usage. PRINCIPAL
FINDINGS: Significant variation in HIT implementation rates and usage was noted. Average HIT use on the two "high-use" ICUs was 49 percent. On the "low-use" ICU, it was 10 percent. Clinicians on the high-use ICUs experienced "silo" effects with potential safety and quality implications. HIT work was associated with spatial, data, and social silos that separated ICU clinicians from one another and their patients. Situational awareness, communication, and patient satisfaction were negatively affected by this siloing.
CONCLUSIONS: HIT has the potential to accentuate social and professional divisions as clinical communications shift from being in-person to electronically mediated. Socio-technically informed usability testing is recommended for those hospitals that have yet to implement HIT. For those hospitals already implementing HIT, we suggest rapid, locally driven qualitative assessments focused on developing solutions to identified gaps between HIT usage patterns and organizational quality goals. © Health Research and Educational Trust.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Health information technology; ethnography; health care teamwork and communications

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28124443      PMCID: PMC5517684          DOI: 10.1111/1475-6773.12466

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Serv Res        ISSN: 0017-9124            Impact factor:   3.402


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