Economic impact of clinical decision support interventions based on electronic health records

Abstract Background Unnecessary healthcare utilization, non-adherence to current clinical guidelines, or insufficient personalized care are perpetual challenges and remain potential major cost-drivers for healthcare systems around the world. Implementing decision support systems into clinical care i...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Daniel Lewkowicz, Attila Wohlbrandt, Erwin Boettinger
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-09-01
Series:BMC Health Services Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-020-05688-3
id doaj-397998363da94c03a689a81fb0183360
record_format Article
spelling doaj-397998363da94c03a689a81fb01833602020-11-25T03:42:22ZengBMCBMC Health Services Research1472-69632020-09-0120111210.1186/s12913-020-05688-3Economic impact of clinical decision support interventions based on electronic health recordsDaniel Lewkowicz0Attila Wohlbrandt1Erwin Boettinger2Digital Health Center, Hasso Plattner Institute, University of PotsdamDigital Health Center, Hasso Plattner Institute, University of PotsdamDigital Health Center, Hasso Plattner Institute, University of PotsdamAbstract Background Unnecessary healthcare utilization, non-adherence to current clinical guidelines, or insufficient personalized care are perpetual challenges and remain potential major cost-drivers for healthcare systems around the world. Implementing decision support systems into clinical care is promised to improve quality of care and thereby yield substantial effects on reducing healthcare expenditure. In this article, we evaluate the economic impact of clinical decision support (CDS) interventions based on electronic health records (EHR). Methods We searched for studies published after 2014 using MEDLINE, CENTRAL, WEB OF SCIENCE, EBSCO, and TUFTS CEA registry databases that encompass an economic evaluation or consider cost outcome measures of EHR based CDS interventions. Thereupon, we identified best practice application areas and categorized the investigated interventions according to an existing taxonomy of front-end CDS tools. Results and discussion Twenty-seven studies are investigated in this review. Of those, twenty-two studies indicate a reduction of healthcare expenditure after implementing an EHR based CDS system, especially towards prevalent application areas, such as unnecessary laboratory testing, duplicate order entry, efficient transfusion practice, or reduction of antibiotic prescriptions. On the contrary, order facilitators and undiscovered malfunctions revealed to be threats and could lead to new cost drivers in healthcare. While high upfront and maintenance costs of CDS systems are a worldwide implementation barrier, most studies do not consider implementation cost. Finally, four included economic evaluation studies report mixed monetary outcome results and thus highlight the importance of further high-quality economic evaluations for these CDS systems. Conclusion Current research studies lack consideration of comparative cost-outcome metrics as well as detailed cost components in their analyses. Nonetheless, the positive economic impact of EHR based CDS interventions is highly promising, especially with regard to reducing waste in healthcare.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-020-05688-3Economic evaluationElectronic health recordClinical decision supportBehavioral economics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daniel Lewkowicz
Attila Wohlbrandt
Erwin Boettinger
spellingShingle Daniel Lewkowicz
Attila Wohlbrandt
Erwin Boettinger
Economic impact of clinical decision support interventions based on electronic health records
BMC Health Services Research
Economic evaluation
Electronic health record
Clinical decision support
Behavioral economics
author_facet Daniel Lewkowicz
Attila Wohlbrandt
Erwin Boettinger
author_sort Daniel Lewkowicz
title Economic impact of clinical decision support interventions based on electronic health records
title_short Economic impact of clinical decision support interventions based on electronic health records
title_full Economic impact of clinical decision support interventions based on electronic health records
title_fullStr Economic impact of clinical decision support interventions based on electronic health records
title_full_unstemmed Economic impact of clinical decision support interventions based on electronic health records
title_sort economic impact of clinical decision support interventions based on electronic health records
publisher BMC
series BMC Health Services Research
issn 1472-6963
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Abstract Background Unnecessary healthcare utilization, non-adherence to current clinical guidelines, or insufficient personalized care are perpetual challenges and remain potential major cost-drivers for healthcare systems around the world. Implementing decision support systems into clinical care is promised to improve quality of care and thereby yield substantial effects on reducing healthcare expenditure. In this article, we evaluate the economic impact of clinical decision support (CDS) interventions based on electronic health records (EHR). Methods We searched for studies published after 2014 using MEDLINE, CENTRAL, WEB OF SCIENCE, EBSCO, and TUFTS CEA registry databases that encompass an economic evaluation or consider cost outcome measures of EHR based CDS interventions. Thereupon, we identified best practice application areas and categorized the investigated interventions according to an existing taxonomy of front-end CDS tools. Results and discussion Twenty-seven studies are investigated in this review. Of those, twenty-two studies indicate a reduction of healthcare expenditure after implementing an EHR based CDS system, especially towards prevalent application areas, such as unnecessary laboratory testing, duplicate order entry, efficient transfusion practice, or reduction of antibiotic prescriptions. On the contrary, order facilitators and undiscovered malfunctions revealed to be threats and could lead to new cost drivers in healthcare. While high upfront and maintenance costs of CDS systems are a worldwide implementation barrier, most studies do not consider implementation cost. Finally, four included economic evaluation studies report mixed monetary outcome results and thus highlight the importance of further high-quality economic evaluations for these CDS systems. Conclusion Current research studies lack consideration of comparative cost-outcome metrics as well as detailed cost components in their analyses. Nonetheless, the positive economic impact of EHR based CDS interventions is highly promising, especially with regard to reducing waste in healthcare.
topic Economic evaluation
Electronic health record
Clinical decision support
Behavioral economics
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-020-05688-3
work_keys_str_mv AT daniellewkowicz economicimpactofclinicaldecisionsupportinterventionsbasedonelectronichealthrecords
AT attilawohlbrandt economicimpactofclinicaldecisionsupportinterventionsbasedonelectronichealthrecords
AT erwinboettinger economicimpactofclinicaldecisionsupportinterventionsbasedonelectronichealthrecords
_version_ 1724525587494600704