A qualitative analysis of an electronic health record (EHR) implementation in an academic ambulatory setting

<strong>Objectives</strong> To determine pre-implementation perspectives of institutional, practice and vendor leadership regarding best practice for implementation of two ambulatory electronic health records (EHRs) at an academic institution. <strong>Design</strong> Semi-str...

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Main Authors: Kahyun Yoon-Flannery, Stephanie Zandieh, Gilad Kuperman, Daniel Langsam, Daniel Hyman, Rainu Kaushal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT 2008-12-01
Series:Journal of Innovation in Health Informatics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hijournal.bcs.org/index.php/jhi/article/view/703
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spelling doaj-a96e3d41e39a421189e321655271eb192020-11-24T22:06:46ZengBCS, The Chartered Institute for ITJournal of Innovation in Health Informatics2058-45552058-45632008-12-0116427728410.14236/jhi.v16i4.703645A qualitative analysis of an electronic health record (EHR) implementation in an academic ambulatory settingKahyun Yoon-FlanneryStephanie ZandiehGilad KupermanDaniel LangsamDaniel HymanRainu Kaushal<strong>Objectives</strong> To determine pre-implementation perspectives of institutional, practice and vendor leadership regarding best practice for implementation of two ambulatory electronic health records (EHRs) at an academic institution. <strong>Design</strong> Semi-structured interviews with ambulatory care network and information systems leadership, medical directors, practice managers and vendors before EHR implementation. Results were analysed using grounded theory with ATLAS.ti version 5.0. Measurements Qualitative data on perceived benefits of EHRs as well as facilitators and barriers to successful implementation. <strong>Results</strong> Interviewees perceived data accessibility, quality and safety measurement, improvement and reporting as benefits of EHR use. Six themes emerged for EHR implementation best practice: effective communication; successful system migration; sufficient hardware, technical equipment, support and training; safeguards for patient privacy; improved efficiency; and a sustainable business plan. <strong>Conclusions</strong> Achieving the benefits of EHRs identified by our interviewees depends on successful implementation and use. Further identification of best implementation practices for EHRs is required, given the financial and clinical consequences of poor implementation.http://hijournal.bcs.org/index.php/jhi/article/view/703ambulatory careelectronic health recordsinformation systems
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kahyun Yoon-Flannery
Stephanie Zandieh
Gilad Kuperman
Daniel Langsam
Daniel Hyman
Rainu Kaushal
spellingShingle Kahyun Yoon-Flannery
Stephanie Zandieh
Gilad Kuperman
Daniel Langsam
Daniel Hyman
Rainu Kaushal
A qualitative analysis of an electronic health record (EHR) implementation in an academic ambulatory setting
Journal of Innovation in Health Informatics
ambulatory care
electronic health records
information systems
author_facet Kahyun Yoon-Flannery
Stephanie Zandieh
Gilad Kuperman
Daniel Langsam
Daniel Hyman
Rainu Kaushal
author_sort Kahyun Yoon-Flannery
title A qualitative analysis of an electronic health record (EHR) implementation in an academic ambulatory setting
title_short A qualitative analysis of an electronic health record (EHR) implementation in an academic ambulatory setting
title_full A qualitative analysis of an electronic health record (EHR) implementation in an academic ambulatory setting
title_fullStr A qualitative analysis of an electronic health record (EHR) implementation in an academic ambulatory setting
title_full_unstemmed A qualitative analysis of an electronic health record (EHR) implementation in an academic ambulatory setting
title_sort qualitative analysis of an electronic health record (ehr) implementation in an academic ambulatory setting
publisher BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT
series Journal of Innovation in Health Informatics
issn 2058-4555
2058-4563
publishDate 2008-12-01
description <strong>Objectives</strong> To determine pre-implementation perspectives of institutional, practice and vendor leadership regarding best practice for implementation of two ambulatory electronic health records (EHRs) at an academic institution. <strong>Design</strong> Semi-structured interviews with ambulatory care network and information systems leadership, medical directors, practice managers and vendors before EHR implementation. Results were analysed using grounded theory with ATLAS.ti version 5.0. Measurements Qualitative data on perceived benefits of EHRs as well as facilitators and barriers to successful implementation. <strong>Results</strong> Interviewees perceived data accessibility, quality and safety measurement, improvement and reporting as benefits of EHR use. Six themes emerged for EHR implementation best practice: effective communication; successful system migration; sufficient hardware, technical equipment, support and training; safeguards for patient privacy; improved efficiency; and a sustainable business plan. <strong>Conclusions</strong> Achieving the benefits of EHRs identified by our interviewees depends on successful implementation and use. Further identification of best implementation practices for EHRs is required, given the financial and clinical consequences of poor implementation.
topic ambulatory care
electronic health records
information systems
url http://hijournal.bcs.org/index.php/jhi/article/view/703
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