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Improving Clinical Workflow in Ambulatory Care: Implemented Recommendations in an Innovation Prototype for the Veteran’s Health Administration

INTRODUCTION: Human factors workflow analyses in healthcare settings prior to technology implemented are recommended to improve workflow in ambulatory care settings. In this paper we describe how insights from a workflow analysis conducted by NIST were implemented in a software prototype developed f...

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Autores principales: Patterson, Emily S., Lowry, Svetlana Z., Ramaiah, Mala, Gibbons, Michael C., Brick, David, Calco, Robert, Matton, Greg, Miller, Anne, Makar, Ellen, Ferrer, Jorge A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: AcademyHealth 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4537152/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26290887
http://dx.doi.org/10.13063/2327-9214.1149
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author Patterson, Emily S.
Lowry, Svetlana Z.
Ramaiah, Mala
Gibbons, Michael C.
Brick, David
Calco, Robert
Matton, Greg
Miller, Anne
Makar, Ellen
Ferrer, Jorge A.
author_facet Patterson, Emily S.
Lowry, Svetlana Z.
Ramaiah, Mala
Gibbons, Michael C.
Brick, David
Calco, Robert
Matton, Greg
Miller, Anne
Makar, Ellen
Ferrer, Jorge A.
author_sort Patterson, Emily S.
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Human factors workflow analyses in healthcare settings prior to technology implemented are recommended to improve workflow in ambulatory care settings. In this paper we describe how insights from a workflow analysis conducted by NIST were implemented in a software prototype developed for a Veteran’s Health Administration (VHA) VAi2 innovation project and associated lessons learned. METHODS: We organize the original recommendations and associated stages and steps visualized in process maps from NIST and the VA’s lessons learned from implementing the recommendations in the VAi2 prototype according to four stages: 1) before the patient visit, 2) during the visit, 3) discharge, and 4) visit documentation. NIST recommendations to improve workflow in ambulatory care (outpatient) settings and process map representations were based on reflective statements collected during one-hour discussions with three physicians. The development of the VAi2 prototype was conducted initially independently from the NIST recommendations, but at a midpoint in the process development, all of the implementation elements were compared with the NIST recommendations and lessons learned were documented. FINDINGS: Story-based displays and templates with default preliminary order sets were used to support scheduling, time-critical notifications, drafting medication orders, and supporting a diagnosis-based workflow. These templates enabled customization to the level of diagnostic uncertainty. Functionality was designed to support cooperative work across interdisciplinary team members, including shared documentation sessions with tracking of text modifications, medication lists, and patient education features. Displays were customized to the role and included access for consultants and site-defined educator teams. DISCUSSION: Workflow, usability, and patient safety can be enhanced through clinician-centered design of electronic health records. The lessons learned from implementing NIST recommendations to improve workflow in ambulatory care using an EHR provide a first step in moving from a billing-centered perspective on how to maintain accurate, comprehensive, and up-to-date information about a group of patients to a clinician-centered perspective. These recommendations point the way towards a “patient visit management system,” which incorporates broader notions of supporting workload management, supporting flexible flow of patients and tasks, enabling accountable distributed work across members of the clinical team, and supporting dynamic tracking of steps in tasks that have longer time distributions.
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spelling pubmed-45371522015-08-19 Improving Clinical Workflow in Ambulatory Care: Implemented Recommendations in an Innovation Prototype for the Veteran’s Health Administration Patterson, Emily S. Lowry, Svetlana Z. Ramaiah, Mala Gibbons, Michael C. Brick, David Calco, Robert Matton, Greg Miller, Anne Makar, Ellen Ferrer, Jorge A. EGEMS (Wash DC) Articles INTRODUCTION: Human factors workflow analyses in healthcare settings prior to technology implemented are recommended to improve workflow in ambulatory care settings. In this paper we describe how insights from a workflow analysis conducted by NIST were implemented in a software prototype developed for a Veteran’s Health Administration (VHA) VAi2 innovation project and associated lessons learned. METHODS: We organize the original recommendations and associated stages and steps visualized in process maps from NIST and the VA’s lessons learned from implementing the recommendations in the VAi2 prototype according to four stages: 1) before the patient visit, 2) during the visit, 3) discharge, and 4) visit documentation. NIST recommendations to improve workflow in ambulatory care (outpatient) settings and process map representations were based on reflective statements collected during one-hour discussions with three physicians. The development of the VAi2 prototype was conducted initially independently from the NIST recommendations, but at a midpoint in the process development, all of the implementation elements were compared with the NIST recommendations and lessons learned were documented. FINDINGS: Story-based displays and templates with default preliminary order sets were used to support scheduling, time-critical notifications, drafting medication orders, and supporting a diagnosis-based workflow. These templates enabled customization to the level of diagnostic uncertainty. Functionality was designed to support cooperative work across interdisciplinary team members, including shared documentation sessions with tracking of text modifications, medication lists, and patient education features. Displays were customized to the role and included access for consultants and site-defined educator teams. DISCUSSION: Workflow, usability, and patient safety can be enhanced through clinician-centered design of electronic health records. The lessons learned from implementing NIST recommendations to improve workflow in ambulatory care using an EHR provide a first step in moving from a billing-centered perspective on how to maintain accurate, comprehensive, and up-to-date information about a group of patients to a clinician-centered perspective. These recommendations point the way towards a “patient visit management system,” which incorporates broader notions of supporting workload management, supporting flexible flow of patients and tasks, enabling accountable distributed work across members of the clinical team, and supporting dynamic tracking of steps in tasks that have longer time distributions. AcademyHealth 2015-07-09 /pmc/articles/PMC4537152/ /pubmed/26290887 http://dx.doi.org/10.13063/2327-9214.1149 Text en All eGEMs publications are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/
spellingShingle Articles
Patterson, Emily S.
Lowry, Svetlana Z.
Ramaiah, Mala
Gibbons, Michael C.
Brick, David
Calco, Robert
Matton, Greg
Miller, Anne
Makar, Ellen
Ferrer, Jorge A.
Improving Clinical Workflow in Ambulatory Care: Implemented Recommendations in an Innovation Prototype for the Veteran’s Health Administration
title Improving Clinical Workflow in Ambulatory Care: Implemented Recommendations in an Innovation Prototype for the Veteran’s Health Administration
title_full Improving Clinical Workflow in Ambulatory Care: Implemented Recommendations in an Innovation Prototype for the Veteran’s Health Administration
title_fullStr Improving Clinical Workflow in Ambulatory Care: Implemented Recommendations in an Innovation Prototype for the Veteran’s Health Administration
title_full_unstemmed Improving Clinical Workflow in Ambulatory Care: Implemented Recommendations in an Innovation Prototype for the Veteran’s Health Administration
title_short Improving Clinical Workflow in Ambulatory Care: Implemented Recommendations in an Innovation Prototype for the Veteran’s Health Administration
title_sort improving clinical workflow in ambulatory care: implemented recommendations in an innovation prototype for the veteran’s health administration
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4537152/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26290887
http://dx.doi.org/10.13063/2327-9214.1149
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