2021
DOI: 10.1055/s-0041-1733909
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Interaction Time with Electronic Health Records: A Systematic Review

Abstract: Background The amount of time that health care clinicians (physicians and nurses) spend interacting with the electronic health record is not well understood. Objective This study aimed to evaluate the time that health care providers spend interacting with electronic health records (EHR). Methods Data are retrieved from Ovid MEDLINE(R) and Epub Ahead of Print, In-Process and Other Non-Indexed Citations and Daily, (Ovid) Embase, CINAHL, and SCOPUS. Study Eligibility Criteria Peer-re… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…Nurses desire more time with their patients, but studies show that a significant amount of their time is spent on documentation and non-nursing activities. Nurses spend between 19% and 35% of their time on documentation 20 and that electronic heath record (EHR) usage leads to heightened cognitive workload for nurses. Increases in cognitive workload can result in stronger feelings of exhaustion and burnout.…”
Section: Wise Use Of Nursing Expertisementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nurses desire more time with their patients, but studies show that a significant amount of their time is spent on documentation and non-nursing activities. Nurses spend between 19% and 35% of their time on documentation 20 and that electronic heath record (EHR) usage leads to heightened cognitive workload for nurses. Increases in cognitive workload can result in stronger feelings of exhaustion and burnout.…”
Section: Wise Use Of Nursing Expertisementioning
confidence: 99%
“…3 Findings from a recent review show that physicians in inpatient and outpatient care spend nearly 40% of their working time with EHRs, while physicians in outpatient care already exceed this percentage. 4 The increase of available electronic patient records provides data analytics with a new field of application and with opportunities to expand the uses of patient data. Common areas of data analytics applications include decision support, administration, and fraud detection.…”
Section: Background and Significancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…These efforts have produced pathologies of care,1 such as cruel delays to accessing care, onerous administrative tasks, “not our job” frustrations when navigating the system, and hurried conversations that result in generic (care for patients like this rather than for this patient) and burdensome care offered by clinicians unfamiliar with and to the patient. Forty percent of patients with multiple chronic conditions report being unable to sustain the work healthcare has delegated on to them2; 40% of healthcare encounters are spent with the clinician attending to the demands of the computer3; 40% of clinicians report symptoms of burnout, with many leaving clinical care or curtailing their patient care hours 4. This industrialisation renders healthcare unsustainable to the economies that support it and to the people that try to give and receive care within it.…”
Section: Healthcare Is Unsustainablementioning
confidence: 99%