Impact of Heath Information Technology on the Quality of Patient Care.

OBJECTIVE To examine the relationships among Electronic Health Record (EHR) adoption and adverse outcomes and satisfaction in hospitalized patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS This secondary analysis of cross sectional data was compiled from four sources: (1) State Inpatient Database from the Healthcare Cost Utilization Project; (2) Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS) Dorenfest Institute; (3) Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems Survey (HCAHPS) and (4) New Jersey nurse survey data. The final analytic sample consisted of data on 854,258 adult patients discharged from 70 New Jersey hospitals in 2006 and 7,679 nurses working in those same hospitals. The analytic approach used ordinary least squares and multiple regression models to estimate the effects of EHR adoption stage on the delivery of nursing care and patient outcomes, controlling for characteristics of patients, nurses, and hospitals. RESULTS Advanced EHR adoption was independently associated with fewer patients with prolonged length of stay and seven-day readmissions. Advanced EHR adoption was not associated with patient satisfaction even when controlling for the strong relationships between better nursing practice environments, particularly staffing and resource adequacy, and missed nursing care and more patients reporting "Top-Box," satisfaction ratings. CONCLUSIONS This innovative study demonstrated that advanced stages of EHR adoption show some promise in improving important patient outcomes of prolonged length of stay and hospital readmissions. Strongly evident by the relationships among better nursing work environments, better quality nursing care, and patient satisfaction is the importance of supporting the fundamentals of quality nursing care as technology is integrated into practice.

[1]  Sowmya R. Rao,et al.  Use of electronic health records in U.S. hospitals. , 2009, The New England journal of medicine.

[2]  L. Aiken,et al.  Rationing of nursing care and its relationship to patient outcomes: the Swiss extension of the International Hospital Outcomes Study. , 2008, International Journal for Quality in Health Care.

[3]  L. Aiken,et al.  Hospital nurse staffing and patient mortality, nurse burnout, and job dissatisfaction. , 2002, JAMA.

[4]  E. Lake The Nursing Practice Environment , 2007, Medical care research and review : MCRR.

[5]  Nancy G. Leveson,et al.  Viewpoint Paper: EHR Safety: The Way Forward to Safe and Effective Systems , 2008, J. Am. Medical Informatics Assoc..

[6]  Yasar A. Ozcan,et al.  Organizational and Environmental Determinants of Hospital EMR Adoption: A National Study , 2007, Journal of Medical Systems.

[7]  Robert L Wears,et al.  Advanced statistics: statistical methods for analyzing cluster and cluster-randomized data. , 2002, Academic emergency medicine : official journal of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine.

[8]  P. Rosenbaum,et al.  Conditional Length of Stay. , 1999, Health services research.

[9]  Julie Sochalski,et al.  Is More Better?: The Relationship Between Nurse Staffing and the Quality of Nursing Care in Hospitals , 2004, Medical care.

[10]  J. Sochalski Quality of Care, Nurse Staffing, and Patient Outcomes , 2001 .

[11]  Marc L. Berger,et al.  Comparative Effectiveness Research , 2012, PharmacoEconomics.

[12]  L. Kohn,et al.  To Err Is Human : Building a Safer Health System , 2007 .

[13]  A. Jha,et al.  Electronic health record functions differ between best and worst hospitals. , 2011, The American journal of managed care.

[14]  P. Rosenbaum,et al.  Prolonged Hospital Stay and the Resident Duty Hour Rules of 2003 , 2009, Medical care.

[15]  J. Spetz,et al.  Hospital Information Technology Systems' Impact on Nurses and Nursing Care , 2010, The Journal of nursing administration.

[16]  Robyn Tamblyn,et al.  Review Paper: The Impact of Electronic Health Records on Time Efficiency of Physicians and Nurses: A Systematic Review , 2005, J. Am. Medical Informatics Assoc..

[17]  Robert M Wachter,et al.  Why diagnostic errors don't get any respect--and what can be done about them. , 2010, Health affairs.

[18]  Ching-Yu Cheng,et al.  Using the Practice Environment Scale of the Nursing Work Index on Asian Nurses , 2009, Nursing research.

[19]  C. Steiner,et al.  Comorbidity measures for use with administrative data. , 1998, Medical care.

[20]  Eric W. Ford,et al.  Is electronic health record use associated with patient satisfaction in hospitals? , 2012, Health care management review.

[21]  Sean P Clarke,et al.  Hospital staffing, organization, and quality of care: cross-national findings. , 2002, International journal for quality in health care : journal of the International Society for Quality in Health Care.

[22]  Matthew D. McHugh,et al.  Nursing: a key to patient satisfaction. , 2009, Health affairs.