“…Positive Unintended Consequences c. Improved morale | Feeling of recognition and increased confidence and pride in individual or organizational performance | [ 13 , 16 , 40 , 61 ] | ✓ |
d. Motivated learning and development | PM spurs further education and training to support improvement | [ 13 , 27 ] | ✓ |
e. New relationships and collaborative problem-solving | Professionals, organizations, or networks come together in new and inventive ways to cope with PM | [ 9 , 26 , 36 ] | ✓✓ |
f. Improved capacity planning | Information collected through PM allows for better internal planning and external applications | N/A | ✓ |
Unintended Consequences on Patients and Patient Care |
I. Inappropriate or Sub-Optimal Care |
a. Clinical decisions driven by PM (rather than by evidence and clinical judgment) | PM generates pressure to diagnose and treat patients in particular ways, resulting in under-treatment, over-treatment, and/or harm to patient | [ 9 , 12 , 13 , 15 , 27 , 28 , 38 , 40 , 49 , 50 , 56 , 57 , 62 – 64 ] | ✓ |
b. Improved documentation without improved care | Providers document care provided more effectively, but the care itself is not improved | [ 6 , 13 , 39 , 49 , 54 , 55 ] | ✓ |
c. Less continuity of care | When PM incen... |
…”