| Literature DB >> 35911305 |
John P Avendano1, Daniel O Gallagher1, Joseph D Hawes1, Joseph Boyle1, Laurie Glasser2, Jomar Aryee1, Brian M Katt1.
Abstract
Electronic health records (EHRs) have provided physicians with a systematic framework for collecting patient data, organizing notes from the healthcare team, and managing the daily workflow in the modern era of healthcare. Despite these advantages, EHRs have proven to be problematic for clinicians. The burdensome regulations requiring increased documentation with the EHR paradigm have led to inefficiencies from data-entry requirements forcing physicians to spend an inordinate amount of time on it, affecting the time available for direct patient care as well as leading to professional burnout. As a result, new modalities such as speech recognition, medical scribes, pre-made EHR templates, and digital scribes [a form of artificial intelligence (AI) based on ambient speech recognition] are increasingly being used to reduce charting time and increase the time available for patient care. The purpose of our review is to provide an up-to-date review of the literature on these modalities including their benefits and shortcomings, to help physicians and other medical professionals choose the best methods to document their patient-care encounters efficiently and effectively.Entities:
Keywords: artificial intelligence in healthcare; charting; clinical documentation improvement; digital scribe; documentation errors; documentation workflow; electronic health record (ehr); scribe; standardized template
Year: 2022 PMID: 35911305 PMCID: PMC9311494 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.26330
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
A summary of the benefits and drawbacks of the various modalities discussed
| Modality | Potential benefits | Drawbacks |
| Voice recognition/dictation | More detailed documentation [ | Conflicting evidence for improvements in turnaround times and error rates vs. traditional typed notes [ |
| Medical scribes | Improvement in physician and resident wellness [ | No improvement in patient satisfaction[ |
| Preset templates | Higher likelihood of completing and documenting more detailed physical examination findings[ | Unchanged accuracy of clinical documentation[ |
| Artificial intelligence (AI) | Providing a synergistic relationship between software and clinician [ | Ethical concerns regarding machine-generated documentation[ |