Background: Hospitals increasingly implement complex electronic health record (EHR) systems to improve quality, safety and efficiency. Whilst many aspects surrounding implementation and adoption processes have been researched, the benefits of such enterprise-wide systems may take decades to materialise. Existing work on optimisation processes has focused on technological, workflow and organisational aspects of optimisation within individual clinical settings, mostly in the United States of America. We here sought to explore how a range of hospitals with different EHR systems have approached the optimisation of EHRs over time and in relation to technology, socio-organisational and health system factors.
Methods: We conducted an in-depth qualitative interview study with technology leads from purposefully sampled hospitals across the country who had implemented a range of EHRs. We explored reflections on the journey of implementing and optimising systems over time, optimisation activities, and perceived lessons learned. Data were transcribed and analysed with NVivo 14 software, using the Technology, People, Organizations, and Macroenvironmental factors (TPOM) frameworkto facilitate coding.
Results: We interviewed 28 individuals from 21 sites with eight different types of EHRs. We observed various optimisation activities across different technological, social, organisational and health system factors. These included improving usability and information technology infrastructures; process optimisation of clinical and administrative workflows; organisational optimisation strategies and relationships with suppliers; and wider system factors such as the need for overall strategic direction and allocation of associated funding. Optimisation activities within these areas stood in some instances in contrast to one another. For example, national activities inhibited local optimisation efforts and organisational optimisation in some instances impacted adversely on usability.
Conclusions: This work emphasises that EHRs are not finished solutions but components of broader information systems needing continuous technological and organisational development. Effective optimisation requires a delicate balance between navigating technological affordances and characteristics to improve usability and organisational processes, as well as regional and national integration to achieve larger-scale interoperability.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2025.105868 | DOI Listing |
Int J Med Inform
March 2025
Professor of Social Research on Technology, Institute for the Study of Science, Technology and Innovation, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
Background: Hospitals increasingly implement complex electronic health record (EHR) systems to improve quality, safety and efficiency. Whilst many aspects surrounding implementation and adoption processes have been researched, the benefits of such enterprise-wide systems may take decades to materialise. Existing work on optimisation processes has focused on technological, workflow and organisational aspects of optimisation within individual clinical settings, mostly in the United States of America.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Opin Support Palliat Care
March 2025
Wolfson Palliative Care Research Centre, University of Hull, Hull, East Yorkshire, UK.
Purpose Of The Review: This review summarises high-level evidence for fan therapy and adds a commentary on the relatively-neglected question of how to optimise benefits based on qualitative evidence, clinical experience and broader research and theory.
Recent Findings: Recent high-level evidence suggests the fan reduces time to recovery from episodic breathlessness rather than reduces daily levels over a longer period. Lower grade evidence suggests the fan can also help people increase their physical activity.
Med Teach
March 2025
Centre for Healthcare Simulation, Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, National University of Singapore, Singapore.
There is a growing recognition of the importance of familial involvement in patient care. In Asian societies, communications with patients' families for routine medical updates and shared decision-making are considered part-and-parcel of clinical practice. Yet, training in familial communications has remained, by and far, a neglected aspect of conventional communications skills training in the medical curriculum, despite distinctive nuances in the communications approach.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFKnee osteoarthritis (OA) is a common chronic condition that leads to joint pain and disability among older adults. An interprofessional collaborative approach has nowadays been widely advocated in knee OA management although little is known about the characteristics of care, roles and responsibilities of healthcare providers and how they collaborate as a team to optimise treatment outcomes. The Donabedian structure-process-outcome framework was used in the review.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Med
March 2025
Health Economics and Policy Evaluation Research (HEPER) Group, Centre for Medicine Use and Safety, Faculty of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.
Background: Long-term cost-effectiveness analyses of health behaviour interventions to effectively manage type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) in low-income countries are crucial for minimising economic burden and optimising resource allocation. Therefore, this study aimed to estimate the long-term cost-effectiveness of implementing a health behaviour intervention to manage T2DM in Nepal.
Methods: A Markov model in combination with a decision tree was developed to compare the costs and outcomes of the health behaviour intervention against usual care among 481 (238-intervention and 243-control) participants from healthcare system and societal perspectives.
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