The Impact of Electronic Health Records on Time Efficiency of Physicians and Nurses: A Systematic Review
University of Toronto · McGill University Health Centre · +1 more institution
Abstract
A systematic review of the literature was performed to examine the impact of electronic health records (EHRs) on documentation time of physicians and nurses and to identify factors that may explain efficiency differences across studies. In total, 23 papers met our inclusion criteria; five were randomized controlled trials, six were posttest control studies, and 12 were one-group pretest-posttest designs. Most studies (58%) collected data using a time and motion methodology in comparison to work sampling (33%) and self-report/survey methods (8%). A weighted average approach was used to combine results from the studies. The use of bedside terminals and central station desktops saved nurses, respectively, 24.5%…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 44.99
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 71
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Documentation
- Medicine
- Health records
- Electronic health record
- Health care
- Medical emergency
- Computer science