Publications by authors named "N W Hendrix"

Importance: In the context of a growing volume of electronic health record (EHR)-based work and post-COVID-19 pandemic staffing pressures, health system leaders need an up-to-date understanding of changes in family physicians' experiences of burnout, determinants of burnout, and how to enhance the family physicians' experience.

Objective: To evaluate the association of family physicians' perceptions of team structure and EHR experiences with burnout and identify modifiable practice structure factors associated with team and EHR experiences.

Design, Setting, And Participants: A serial cross-sectional survey study was conducted from December 1, 2016, to October 24, 2023.

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Two decades into the era of Electronic Health Records (EHRs), the promise of streamlining clinical care, reducing burden, and improving patient outcomes has yet to be realized. A cross-sectional family physician census conducted by the American Board of Family Medicine in 2022 and 2023 included self-reported physician EHR satisfaction. Of the nearly 10,000 responding family physicians, only one-in-four (26.

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Importance: Electronic health record (EHR) work has been associated with decreased physician well-being. Understanding the association between EHR usability and physician satisfaction and burnout, and whether team and technology strategies moderate this association, is critical to informing efforts to address EHR-associated physician burnout.

Objectives: To measure family physician satisfaction with their EHR and EHR usability across functions and evaluate the association of EHR usability with satisfaction and burnout, as well as the moderating association of 4 team and technology EHR efficiency strategies.

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Ethiopia has made significant progress in the last two decades in improving the availability and coverage of essential maternal and child health services including childhood immunizations. As Ethiopia keeps momentum towards achieving national immunization goals, methods must be developed to analyze routinely collected health facility data and generate localized coverage estimates. This study leverages the District Health Information Software (DHIS2) platform to estimate immunization coverage for the first dose of measles vaccine (MCV1) and the third dose of diphtheria-pertussis-tetanus-Hib-HepB vaccine (Penta3) across Ethiopian districts ("woredas").

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Objective: To identify impacts of different survey methodologies assessing primary care physicians' (PCPs') experiences with electronic health records (EHRs), we compared three surveys: the 2022 Continuous Certification Questionnaire (CCQ) from the American Board of Family Medicine, the 2022 University of California San Francisco (UCSF) Physician Health IT Survey, and the 2021 National Electronic Health Records Survey (NEHRS).

Materials And Methods: We evaluated differences between survey pairs using Rao-Scott corrected chi-square tests, which account for weighting.

Results: CCQ received 3991 responses from PCPs (100% response rate), UCSF received 1375 (3.

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