Perceptions of electronic health record implementation: a statewide survey of physicians in Rhode Island.

Matthew C Wylie, Rosa R Baier, Rebekah L Gardner
Author Information
  1. Matthew C Wylie: Brown University School of Public Health, Providence, RI. Electronic address: Matthew_Wylie@brown.edu.
  2. Rosa R Baier: Brown University School of Public Health, Providence, RI; Healthcentric Advisors, Providence, RI.
  3. Rebekah L Gardner: Healthcentric Advisors, Providence, RI; Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, RI.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Although electronic health record use improves healthcare delivery, adoption into clinical practice is incomplete. We sought to identify the extent of adoption in Rhode Island and the characteristics of physicians and electronic health records associated with positive experience.
METHODS: We performed a cross-sectional study of data collected by the Rhode Island Department of Health for the Health Information Technology Survey 2009 to 2013. Survey questions included provider and practice demographics, health record information, and Likert-type scaled questions regarding how electronic health record use affected clinical practice.
RESULTS: The survey response rate ranged from 50% to 65%, with 62% in 2013. Increasing numbers of physicians in Rhode Island use an electronic health record. In 2013, 81% of physicians used one, and adoption varied by clinical subspecialty. Most providers think that electronic health record use improves billing and quality improvement but has not improved job satisfaction. Physicians with longer and more sophisticated electronic health record use report positive effects of introduction on all aspects of practice examined (P < .001). Older physician age is associated with worse opinion of electronic health record introduction (P < .001). Of the 18 electronic health record vendors most frequently used in Rhode Island, 5 were associated with improved job satisfaction.
CONCLUSIONS: We report the largest statewide study of electronic health record adoption to date. We found increasing physician use in Rhode Island, and the extent of adoption varies by subspecialty. Although older physicians are less likely to be positive about electronic health record adoption, longer and more sophisticated use are associated with more positive opinions, suggesting acceptance will grow over time.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Age Factors
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act
Attitude of Health Personnel
Cross-Sectional Studies
Electronic Health Records
Health Care Surveys
Health Plan Implementation
Humans
Job Satisfaction
Middle Aged
Patient Credit and Collection
Physicians
Quality of Health Care
Rhode Island
Specialization
Time Factors
United States
Workflow

Word Cloud

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