Wednesday, April 24, 2013

When EHR and Caring Meet

Anticipate Resistance

While up-front preparation is critical, nurse administrators still need to anticipate resistance at every point along the way.Sometimes that resistance stems from nurses’ sense that systems appear to be geared toward doctors’ workflows.

In order to implement it properly is helping people understand how the system will benefit them. The value of the change needs to be understood, and that value is different for each person who touches the system. Sometimes, however, understandable resistance can be addressed by a discussion of the greater good. 

Gird for the Initial Weeks

In the end, no matter how well prepared a team may be, people need to expect that the initial weeks will bring a drop in productivity. Some researchers suggests that adding extra nursing staff around this time could help this problem

Understand the Impact on Patient Interactions

The eye contact issue raises another concern many nurses have expressed: what are the subtle effects on patient interactions? Three overlapping challenges seem to be at play.

Time is one. Research has demonstrated that nurses spend more time inputting information with EHRs, but less time finding the information needed to make wise decisions. Usually, that clinical information is also more complete and more accurate than it was with paper records.
That said, for home health nurses who must race from one setting to the next over their day, the time issue can be particularly vexing. The inputting of information definitely puts pressures on.

A second concern is that computer screens could become physical barriers between nurse and patient. “I show both nurses and doctors how to create a triangle between you, the patient and the computer screen,” “You can then use the screen as a blackboard, a teaching moment, a way to actively engage patients in health care.” UCSF’s James Kahn

Third, some nurses have worried that templates will foster a robotic effect on their clinical judgment. Marilyn Chow , (UCSF School of Nursing ’70, ’72, ’82), vice president, National Patient Care Services at Kaiser Permanente, believes this can be addressed through time and education – and it is similar to some past challenges.

 

Strive for Interoperability Across Sett
ings

To truly achieve the type of change that health care reformers seek, tighter clinical integration across practice settings is a must. Systems have to talk with each other to gather the clinical information they need. This is the thinking behind health information exchanges that will store and communicate patient data across multiple health systems.




Keep an Eye on Information Overload

For all the advantages of having more information at one’s fingertips, nurses and others have begun to voice concerns about information overload.

“In designing these systems you have to think about our ability to retain and incorporate information; things can get to the point where a nurse isn’t seeing the important information clearly,” says Chow, who believes this is an important area for research. “We need to create [decision support] systems that have a limited number of logical triggers and alerts that focus entirely on what the nurse is going to need to know, so that the nurse can focus on the patient.”


Measure the Impact on Patient Care

The good news is that those who make the commitment are finding improvements in patient care. “The documentation has increased so much in the favor of patient care that any learning curve is worth it,” says Kenig. “Patients are 10-fold safer.”

 Looking Ahead

Perhaps what’s most exciting is that EHRs still have an enormous amount of untapped potential. “As you get more and more sophisticated, you can use the system so much more efficiently,” says Lee. “Your understanding is constantly evolving.”
Yet even in these relatively early days, with their many pitfalls, the universal sense from this group is that EHRs have already begun to transform nursing care and the entire health care system for the better.





(http://scienceofcaring.ucsf.edu/future-nursing/nurses-adopt-electronic-health-records)



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