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JAMIA 2005;12:505-516 doi:10.1197/jamia.M1700
  • The Practice of Informatics
  • Review Paper

The Impact of Electronic Health Records on Time Efficiency of Physicians and Nurses: A Systematic Review

  1. Lise Poissant,
  2. Jennifer Pereira,
  3. Robyn Tamblyn,
  4. Yuko Kawasumi
  1. Affiliations of the authors: Clinical and Health Informatics (LP), Medicine and Clinical Epidemiology (RT), and Departments of Epidemiology and Biostatistics (RT, YK), McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Toronto and Centre for Evaluation of Medicines, St. Joseph's Healthcare, Toronto, Ontario, Canada (JP)
  1. Correspondence and reprints: Lise Poissant, PhD, Clinical and Health Informatics Research Group, McGill University, Morrice House, 1140 Pine Ave. West, Montreal Quebec, Canada H3A 1A3; e-mail: <lise.poissant{at}mcgill.ca>
  • Received 16 September 2004
  • Accepted 24 April 2005

Abstract

A systematic review of the literature was performed to examine the impact of electronic health records (EHRs) on documentation time of physicians and nurses and to identify factors that may explain efficiency differences across studies. In total, 23 papers met our inclusion criteria; five were randomized controlled trials, six were posttest control studies, and 12 were one-group pretest-posttest designs. Most studies (58%) collected data using a time and motion methodology in comparison to work sampling (33%) and self-report/survey methods (8%). A weighted average approach was used to combine results from the studies. The use of bedside terminals and central station desktops saved nurses, respectively, 24.5% and 23.5% of their overall time spent documenting during a shift. Using bedside or point-of-care systems increased documentation time of physicians by 17.5%. In comparison, the use of central station desktops for computerized provider order entry (CPOE) was found to be inefficient, increasing the work time from 98.1% to 328.6% of physician's time per working shift (weighted average of CPOE-oriented studies, 238.4%). Studies that conducted their evaluation process relatively soon after implementation of the EHR tended to demonstrate a reduction in documentation time in comparison to the increases observed with those that had a longer time period between implementation and the evaluation process. This review highlighted that a goal of decreased documentation time in an EHR project is not likely to be realized. It also identified how the selection of bedside or central station desktop EHRs may influence documentation time for the two main user groups, physicians and nurses.

Footnotes

  • Support provided by the Canadian Stroke Network and Valorisation Research Quebec.

  • The authors thank L. Taylor, G. Bartlett, and S. Ahmed from the Clinical and Health Informatics Research Group for their comments and editorial support, Q. Nguyen for her help with retrieval of the literature, and the authors who responded to our requests for additional information.

  • This work was undertaken as partial requirement for the Canadian Health Informatics Training Program.

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