The United States is making substantial investments to accelerate the adoption and use of interoperable electronic health record (EHR) systems. Using data from the 2009-13 Electronic Health Records Survey, we found that EHR adoption continues to grow: In 2013, 78 percent of office-based physicians had adopted some type of EHR, and 48 percent had the capabilities required for a basic EHR system. However, we also found persistent gaps in EHR adoption, with physicians in solo practices and non-primary care specialties lagging behind others. Physicians' electronic health information exchange with other providers was limited, with only 14 percent sharing data with providers outside their organization. Finally, we found that 30 percent of physicians routinely used capabilities for secure messaging with patients, and 24 percent routinely provided patients with the ability to view online, download, or transmit their health record. These findings suggest that although EHR adoption continues to grow, policies to support health information exchange and patient engagement will require ongoing attention.A ccelerating the adoption of health information technology (IT) has been recognized as a national policy priority for more than a decade. HITECH's goals are to promote the adoption and use of interoperable electronic health records (EHRs) and health information exchange (HIE), which can serve as the foundation for improvements in the cost and quality of the US health care delivery system. 3 In particular, modernizing the country's health IT infrastructure enables broader efforts to pursue new models of care delivery. To help move the country toward this goal, beginning in 2011 the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) began making incentive payments to eligible professionals who demonstrated the regular use of specific computerized capabilities that meet meaningful-use objectives.
4Early evidence on the impact of HITECH suggested that its investments had accelerated the rate of EHR adoption. From 2010 to 2012 adoption of basic EHR systems and specific meaningful-use capabilities grew rapidly among US ambulatory care physicians.
5Physicians who previously had significantly lower rates of adoption, 6 including those who were older or worked in rural areas or areas with high rates of poverty, had the highest relative gains.