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Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 9/2019

01-09-2019 | Burnout Syndrome | Original Research

Practicing Clinicians’ Recommendations to Reduce Burden from the Electronic Health Record Inbox: a Mixed-Methods Study

Authors: Daniel R. Murphy, MD MBA, Tyler Satterly, M.Eng, Traber D. Giardina, PhD MSW, Dean F. Sittig, PhD, Hardeep Singh, MD MPH

Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Issue 9/2019

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Abstract

Background

Workload from electronic health record (EHR) inbox notifications leads to information overload and contributes to job dissatisfaction and physician burnout. Better understanding of physicians’ inbox requirements and workflows could optimize inbox designs, enhance efficiency, and reduce safety risks from information overload.

Design

We conducted a mixed-methods study to identify strategies to enhance EHR inbox design and workflow. First, we performed a secondary analysis of national survey data of all Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) primary care practitioners (PCP) to identify major themes in responses to a free-text question soliciting suggestions to improve EHR inbox design and workflows. We then conducted expert interviews of clinicians at five health care systems (1 VA and 4 non-VA settings using 4 different EHRs) to understand existing optimal strategies to improve efficiency and situational awareness related to EHR inbox use. Themes from survey data were cross-validated with interview findings.

Results

We analyzed responses from 2104 PCPs who completed the free-text inbox question (of 5001 PCPs who responded to survey) and used an inductive approach to identify five themes: (1) Inbox notification content should be actionable for patient care and relevant to recipient clinician, (2) Inboxes should reduce risk of losing messages, (3) Inbox functionality should be optimized to improve efficiency of processing notifications, (4) Team support should be leveraged to help with EHR inbox notification burden, (5) Sufficient time should be provided to all clinicians to process EHR inbox notifications. We subsequently interviewed 15 VA and non-VA clinicians and identified 11 unique strategies, each corresponding directly with one of these five themes.

Conclusion

Feedback from practicing end-user clinicians provides robust evidence to improve content and design of the EHR inbox and related clinical workflows and organizational policies. Several strategies we identified could improve clinicians’ EHR efficiency and satisfaction as well as empower them to work with their local administrators, health IT personnel, and EHR developers to improve these systems.
Literature
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Metadata
Title
Practicing Clinicians’ Recommendations to Reduce Burden from the Electronic Health Record Inbox: a Mixed-Methods Study
Authors
Daniel R. Murphy, MD MBA
Tyler Satterly, M.Eng
Traber D. Giardina, PhD MSW
Dean F. Sittig, PhD
Hardeep Singh, MD MPH
Publication date
01-09-2019
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Issue 9/2019
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Electronic ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-019-05112-5

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