Appl Clin Inform 2011; 02(03): 250-262
DOI: 10.4338/ACI-2011-03-RA-0021
Research Article
Schattauer GmbH

What Affects Clinicians’ Usage of Health Information Exchange?

R. Rudin
1   MIT CSAIL, Cambridge, USA
,
L. Volk
2   Partners Healthcare, Boston, USA
,
S. Simon
2   Partners Healthcare, Boston, USA
,
D. Bates
3   Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA
› Author Affiliations
Further Information

Correspondence to:

Robert S. Rudin
MIT CSAIL
32 Vassar St #250
Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
Phone: 617–253–3510   
Fax: 617–258–8682   

Publication History

received: 15 March 2011

accepted: 17 May 2011

Publication Date:
16 December 2017 (online)

 

Summary

Background: The ability to electronically exchange health information among healthcare providers holds enormous promise to improve care coordination and reduce costs. Provider-to-provider data exchange is an explicit goal of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 and may be essential for the long-term success of the Affordable Care Act of 2010. However, little is known about what factors affect clinicians’ usage of health information exchange (HIE) functionality.

Objective: To identify factors that affect clinicians’ HIE usage - in terms of frequency of contributing data to and accessing data from aggregate patient records - and suggest policies for fostering its usage.

Methods: We performed a qualitative study using grounded theory by interviewing clinician-users and HIE staff of one operational HIE which supported aggregate patient record functionality. Fifteen clinicians were interviewed for one hour each about what factors affect their HIE usage. Five HIE staff were asked about technology and training issues to provide context. Interviews were recorded, transcribed and analyzed. Recruitment excluded clinicians with little or no familiarity with the HIE and was restricted to one community and a small number of specialties.

Results: Clinicians were motivated to access the HIE by perceived improvements in care quality and time savings, but their motivation was moderated by an extensive list of factors including gaps in data, workflow issues and usability issues. HIE access intensities varied widely by clinician. Data contribution intensities to the HIE also varied widely and were affected by billing concerns and time constraints.

Conclusions: Clinicians, EHR and HIE product vendors and trainers should work toward integrating HIE into clinical workflows. Policies should create incentives for HIE organizations to assist clinicians in using HIE, develop measures of HIE contributions and accesses, and create incentives for clinicians to contribute data to HIEs.


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Conflicts of interest

The authors report no conflicts of interest.


Correspondence to:

Robert S. Rudin
MIT CSAIL
32 Vassar St #250
Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
Phone: 617–253–3510   
Fax: 617–258–8682