Ability to Generate Patient Registries Among Practices With and Without Electronic Health Records

Background The ability to generate registries of patients with particular clinical attributes, such as diagnoses or medications taken, is central to measuring and improving the quality of health care. However, it is not known how many providers have the ability to generate such registries. Objectives To assess the proportion of physician practices that can construct registries of patients with specific diagnoses, laboratory results, or medications, and to determine the relationship between electronic health record (EHR) usage and the ability to perform registry functions. Methods We conducted a mail survey of a stratified random sample of physician practices in Massachusetts in the northeastern United States (N = 1884). The survey included questions about the physicians’ ability to generate diagnosis, laboratory result, and medication registries; the presence of EHR; and usage of specific EHR features. Results The response rate was 71% (1345/1884). Overall, 79.8% of physician practices reported being able to generate registries of patients by diagnosis; 56.1% by laboratory result; and 55.8% by medication usage. In logistic regression analyses, adjusting for urban/rural location, practice size and ownership, teaching status, hospital affiliation, and specialty, physician practices with an EHR were more likely to be able to construct diagnosis registries (adjusted odds ratio [OR] 1.53, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.25 - 1.86), laboratory registries (OR 1.42, 95% CI 1.22 - 1.66), and medication registries (OR 2.30, 95% CI 1.96 - 2.70). Conclusions Many physician practices were able to generate registries, but this capability is far from universal. Adoption of EHRs appears to be a useful step toward this end, and practices with EHRs are considerably more likely to be able to carry out registry functions. Because practices need registries to perform broad-based quality improvement, they should consider adopting EHRs that have built-in registry functionality.

[1]  Sowmya R. Rao,et al.  Electronic health records in ambulatory care--a national survey of physicians. , 2008, The New England journal of medicine.

[2]  Donald R. Miller,et al.  Who has diabetes? Best estimates of diabetes prevalence in the Department of Veterans Affairs based on computerized patient data. , 2004, Diabetes care.

[3]  J. Usher-Smith,et al.  Evaluation of the cost savings and clinical outcomes of switching patients from atorvastatin to simvastatin and losartan to candesartan in a Primary Care setting , 2007, International journal of clinical practice.

[4]  T. Cheetham,et al.  Successful conversion of patients with hypercholesterolemia from a brand name to a generic cholesterol-lowering drug. , 2005, The American journal of managed care.

[5]  James M. Naessens,et al.  Use of a Registry-generated Audit, Feedback, and Patient Reminder Intervention in an Internal Medicine Resident Clinic—A Randomized Trial , 2007, Journal of General Internal Medicine.

[6]  Qi Li,et al.  Report Central: Quality Reporting Tool in an Electronic Health Record , 2006, AMIA.

[7]  Evangelos Kontopantelis,et al.  Quality of primary care in England with the introduction of pay for performance. , 2007, The New England journal of medicine.

[8]  Farzad Mostashari,et al.  Health care as if health mattered. , 2008, JAMA.

[9]  Thomas Bodenheimer,et al.  Improving primary care for patients with chronic illness: the chronic care model, Part 2. , 2002, JAMA.

[10]  Adam Wilcox,et al.  Impact of generalist care managers on patients with diabetes. , 2005, Health services research.

[11]  Anil Jain,et al.  Responding to the Rofecoxib Withdrawal Crisis: A New Model for Notifying Patients at Risk and Their Health Care Providers , 2005, Annals of Internal Medicine.

[12]  E H Wagner,et al.  A population-based approach to diabetes management in a primary care setting: early results and lessons learned. , 1998, Effective clinical practice : ECP.

[13]  Steven R. Simon,et al.  Research Paper: Physicians' Use of Key Functions in Electronic Health Records from 2005 to 2007: A Statewide Survey , 2009, J. Am. Medical Informatics Assoc..

[14]  Blackford Middleton,et al.  Quality Dashboards: Technical and Architectural Considerations of an Actionable Reporting Tool for Population Management , 2006, AMIA.

[15]  Rainu Kaushal,et al.  Physicians and electronic health records: a statewide survey. , 2007, Archives of internal medicine.

[16]  Thomas Bodenheimer,et al.  Improving primary care for patients with chronic illness. , 2002, JAMA.

[17]  E. Wagner,et al.  Population-based management of diabetes care. , 1995, Patient education and counseling.