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Patient Centered Evaluation of Computerized Patient Records System (PACECPRS)

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VA Office of Research and Development

Status

Completed

Conditions

Electronic Medical Records

Treatments

Behavioral: Physician training in patient-centered emr use

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

NCT00935584
IIR 07-196

Details and patient eligibility

About

The VHA is a leader in electronic medical records (EMR) use for patient care. It is believed that EMR use by doctors will improve patient-centeredness of visits, and improve clinical care. The proposed study will determine how doctors should use the EMR during patient consultations. We will also develop a training program to improve doctors ability to communicate with patients while using EMR.

Full description

Anticipated Impact on Veterans Healthcare: Health information technology (HIT), including electronic medical records (EMR) has the potential to improve the quality and safety of ambulatory care. The VHA is a leader in EMR implementation. It is believed that EMR use by physicians will improve patient-centeredness of visits, and healthcare outcomes. The proposed clinical trial addresses the need for rigorous research on EMR use, patient-centered care, and relevant health outcomes. Both physician-patient communication and EMR use are cross-cutting clinical issues with broad implications for patient care within the VHA. Consequently, the proposed project is directly related to the VHA's mission to use HIT to improve the quality health care for veteran patients.

BACKGROUND/RATIONALE EMRs can potentially improve quality and safety of ambulatory care. However, little research systematically documents the effect of EMRs on patient-centered care. Studies of the EMR's effect on patient-provider communication have been observational and had small sample sizes. Overall, these studies reported varied success regarding providers integrating the EMR into office visits, and suggest that further research is needed to evaluate the effectiveness of training providers in patient-centered communication and EMR use.

OBJECTIVES The PACE aims were to study how EMR use affects patient-provider communication behaviors, and patient-centered care and related health outcomes; to develop a unique provider training program tailored to patient-centered EMR use; and to evaluate the effect of the training intervention on patient-provider communication, patient-centered care, and provider EMR use.

METHODS

The study used a quasi-experimental (pre-post intervention design) carried out in three phases:

  1. Pre-intervention: A pre-intervention patient-provider visit was conducted for each patient-provider pair. Visits were video recorded and reviewed for verbal and nonverbal patient-provider communication. MORAE software was used to record provider-EMR interaction data, including page views, navigation, and mouse clicks. Data were collected for related outcomes (patient and provider satisfaction).
  2. Training: Findings from pre-intervention data guided development of a multifaceted provider training intervention promoting patient-centered EMR appropriation. The training intervention was delivered via a full day training workshop and individual feedback sessions.
  3. Post-intervention: A second round of visits was conducted with the same patient-provider pairs and similar data were collected as in pre-intervention. Within group analyses (pre-post) were used to test whether the training intervention resulted in significant improvements in (a) patient-centered EMR use and (b) related outcomes (patient and provider satisfaction).

IMPACT PACE findings emphasize the need to address EMR usability by the VHA hi2 (Health Informatics Initiative) and iEHR team.

Enrollment

151 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Adult (age>18) male and female patients from participating study providers' practices who have an established a doctor-patient relationship with their provider and require a minimum of 2 primary care clinic visits/year based on historical clinic data.

Exclusion criteria

  • Patients with significant communication disability (severe speech and hearing impairment, severe dementia, or a mental health condition resulting in a non-communicative patient);
  • patients are considered mentally incompetent to provide informed written consent;
  • a life expectancy of less than 1 year.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

151 participants in 1 patient group

PACE Study
Other group
Description:
The study utilized a quasi-experimental pre-post intervention design. The intervention provided was physician education to improve EMR use and communication. Physician training in patient-centered EMR use was developed. The conceptual model of "patient-centered communication" will provide the underlying framework for the training aimed at improving physicians interviewing and communication skills.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Physician training in patient-centered emr use

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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