rss
J Am Med Inform Assoc 2008;15:272-277 doi:10.1197/jamia.M2618
  • Perspectives on Informatics
  • Viewpoint Paper

EHR Safety: The Way Forward to Safe and Effective Systems

  1. James M Walkera,b,
  2. Pascale Carayonc,
  3. Nancy Levesond,
  4. Ronald A Paulusa,
  5. John Tookere,
  6. Homer Chinf,
  7. Albert Bothe Jra,
  8. Walter F Stewartg
  1. aGeisinger Health System, Danville, PA
  2. bEHR Safety Institute, Danville, PA
  3. cDepartment of Industrial and Systems Engineering, and Center for Quality and Productivity Improvement, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI
  4. dDepartment of Aeronautics and Astronautics, and Department of Engineering Systems and Complex Systems Research Lab, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA
  5. eAmerican College of Physicians, Philadelphia, PA
  6. fClinical Information Systems, Kaiser Permanente Northwest Region, Portland, OR
  7. gGeisinger Center for Health Research, Danville, PA
  1. Correspondence: James M. Walker, MD, FACP, Geisinger Health System, MC 30-06, 100 North Academy Avenue, Danville, PA 17822-3006 (e-mail: <jmwalker{at}geisinger.edu>)
  • Received 14 September 2007
  • Accepted 13 February 2008

Abstract

Diverse stakeholders—clinicians, researchers, business leaders, policy makers, and the public—have good reason to believe that the effective use of electronic health care records (EHRs) is essential to meaningful advances in health care quality and patient safety. However, several reports have documented the potential of EHRs to contribute to health care system flaws and patient harm. As organizations (including small hospitals and physician practices) with limited resources for care-process transformation, human-factors engineering, software safety, and project management begin to use EHRs, the chance of EHR-associated harm may increase. The authors propose a coordinated set of steps to advance the practice and theory of safe EHR design, implementation, and continuous improvement. These include setting EHR implementation in the context of health care process improvement, building safety into the specification and design of EHRs, safety testing and reporting, and rapid communication of EHR-related safety flaws and incidents.

Footnotes

    This Article

    Services

    1. Request permissions

    Responses

    1. Submit a response
    2. No responses published

    Social bookmarking

    Access policy for JAMIA

    All content published in JAMIA is deposited with PubMed Central by the publisher with a 12 month embargo. Authors/funders may pay an Unlocked fee of $2,000 to make the article free on the JAMIA website and PMC immediately on publication.

    All content older than 12 months is freely available on this website.

    AMIA members can log in with their JAMIA user name (email address) and password or via the AMIA website.