The long-term financial and clinical impact of an electronic health record on an academic ophthalmology practice.

J Ophthalmol

Department of Statistics and Biostatistics, California State University, East Bay 25800 Carlos Bee Boulevard, Hayward, CA 94542, USA.

Published: March 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined the financial and clinical productivity outcomes of using electronic health records (EHR) over a 9-year period involving 12 clinical providers and 191,360 billable encounters.
  • Results showed no significant change in clinical revenue per provider after EHR implementation, with average revenues remaining similar before and after the transition.
  • While transcription costs decreased significantly by nearly $189,000 over four years, the overall productivity metrics like charge capture and patient visits remained stable, indicating that the EHR did not lead to clear financial benefits in the academic ophthalmology practice.

Article Abstract

Purpose. To examine financial and clinical work productivity outcomes associated with the use of the electronic health record (EHR). Methods. 191,360 billable clinical encounters were analyzed for 12 clinical providers over a 9-year study period during which an EHR was implemented. Main outcome measures were clinical revenues collected per provider and secondary outcomes were charge capture, patient visit coding levels, transcription costs, patient visit volume per provider, digital drawing, and digital imaging volume. Results. The difference in inflation adjusted net clinical revenue per provider per year did not change significantly in the period after EHR implementation (mean = $404,198; SD = $17,912) than before (mean = $411,420; SD = $39,366) (P = 0.746). Charge capture, the proportion of higher- and lower-level visit codes for new and established patients, and patient visits per provider remained stable. A total savings of $188,951 in transcription costs occurred over a 4-year time period post-EHR implementation. The rate of drawing the ophthalmic exam in the EHR was low (mean = 2.28%; SD = 0.05%) for all providers. Conclusions. This study did not show a clear financial gain after EHR implementation in an academic ophthalmology practice. Ophthalmologists do not rely on drawings to document the ophthalmic exam; instead, the ophthalmic exam becomes text-driven in a paperless world.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4354962PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2015/329819DOI Listing

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