Impact of Information Technology on Information Gaps in Canadian Ambulatory Care Encounters

BackgroundSpecialist physicians require clinical information for patient visits in ambulatory encounters, some of which they may access via digital health solutions. ObjectiveThis study explored the completeness of information for patient care and the consequences...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Korosec, Lauren, Balenko, Krista, Hagens, Simon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2015-01-01
Series:JMIR Medical Informatics
Online Access:http://medinform.jmir.org/2015/1/e1/
id doaj-52260d2bebb64c61b4117b7d0caa3d1f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-52260d2bebb64c61b4117b7d0caa3d1f2021-05-03T01:42:19ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Medical Informatics2291-96942015-01-0131e110.2196/medinform.4066Impact of Information Technology on Information Gaps in Canadian Ambulatory Care EncountersKorosec, LaurenBalenko, KristaHagens, Simon BackgroundSpecialist physicians require clinical information for patient visits in ambulatory encounters, some of which they may access via digital health solutions. ObjectiveThis study explored the completeness of information for patient care and the consequences of gaps for ambulatory specialist services provided in ambulatory settings in Canada. MethodsA sample of specialist physicians practising in outpatient clinics was recruited from a health care provider research panel. The study (n=1800 patient encounters) looked at the completeness of patient information experienced by physicians who work in environments with rich health information exchange (Connected) and a comparison cohort with less information available electronically (Unconnected). ResultsUnconnected physicians were significantly more likely to be missing information they needed for patient encounters (13% of encounters for Unconnected physicians vs 7% for Connected physicians). Unconnected physicians were also more likely to report that missing information had consequences (23% vs 13% of encounters). Lab results were the most common type of patient information missing for both Unconnected and Connected specialists (25% for Unconnected physicians vs 11% Connected physicians). ConclusionsThe results from this study indicate that Canadian physicians commonly experience information gaps in ambulatory encounters, and that many of these gaps are of consequence to themselves, their patients, and the healthcare system. Wasting physician and patient time, as well as being forced to proceed with incomplete information, were the most common consequences of information gaps reported.http://medinform.jmir.org/2015/1/e1/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Korosec, Lauren
Balenko, Krista
Hagens, Simon
spellingShingle Korosec, Lauren
Balenko, Krista
Hagens, Simon
Impact of Information Technology on Information Gaps in Canadian Ambulatory Care Encounters
JMIR Medical Informatics
author_facet Korosec, Lauren
Balenko, Krista
Hagens, Simon
author_sort Korosec, Lauren
title Impact of Information Technology on Information Gaps in Canadian Ambulatory Care Encounters
title_short Impact of Information Technology on Information Gaps in Canadian Ambulatory Care Encounters
title_full Impact of Information Technology on Information Gaps in Canadian Ambulatory Care Encounters
title_fullStr Impact of Information Technology on Information Gaps in Canadian Ambulatory Care Encounters
title_full_unstemmed Impact of Information Technology on Information Gaps in Canadian Ambulatory Care Encounters
title_sort impact of information technology on information gaps in canadian ambulatory care encounters
publisher JMIR Publications
series JMIR Medical Informatics
issn 2291-9694
publishDate 2015-01-01
description BackgroundSpecialist physicians require clinical information for patient visits in ambulatory encounters, some of which they may access via digital health solutions. ObjectiveThis study explored the completeness of information for patient care and the consequences of gaps for ambulatory specialist services provided in ambulatory settings in Canada. MethodsA sample of specialist physicians practising in outpatient clinics was recruited from a health care provider research panel. The study (n=1800 patient encounters) looked at the completeness of patient information experienced by physicians who work in environments with rich health information exchange (Connected) and a comparison cohort with less information available electronically (Unconnected). ResultsUnconnected physicians were significantly more likely to be missing information they needed for patient encounters (13% of encounters for Unconnected physicians vs 7% for Connected physicians). Unconnected physicians were also more likely to report that missing information had consequences (23% vs 13% of encounters). Lab results were the most common type of patient information missing for both Unconnected and Connected specialists (25% for Unconnected physicians vs 11% Connected physicians). ConclusionsThe results from this study indicate that Canadian physicians commonly experience information gaps in ambulatory encounters, and that many of these gaps are of consequence to themselves, their patients, and the healthcare system. Wasting physician and patient time, as well as being forced to proceed with incomplete information, were the most common consequences of information gaps reported.
url http://medinform.jmir.org/2015/1/e1/
work_keys_str_mv AT koroseclauren impactofinformationtechnologyoninformationgapsincanadianambulatorycareencounters
AT balenkokrista impactofinformationtechnologyoninformationgapsincanadianambulatorycareencounters
AT hagenssimon impactofinformationtechnologyoninformationgapsincanadianambulatorycareencounters
_version_ 1721485684941783040