Variation in Physicians’ Electronic Health Record Documentation and Potential Patient Harm from That Variation

Variation in Physicians’ Electronic Health Record Documentation and Potential Patient Harm from That Variation

Published: Nov 01, 2019
Publisher: Journal of General Internal Medicine, vol. 34
Download
Authors

Genna R. Cohen

Charles P. Friedman

Andrew M. Ryan

Caroline R. Richardson

Julia Adler-Milstein

Background

Physician-to-physician variation in electronic health record (EHR) documentation not driven by patients’ clinical status could be harmful.

Objective

Measure variation in completion of common clinical documentation domains. Identify perceived causes and effects of variation and strategies to mitigate negative effects.

Design

Sequential, explanatory, mixed methods using log data from a commercial EHR vendor and semi-structured interviews with outpatient primary care practices.

Participants

Quantitative: 170,332 encounters led by 809 physicians in 237 practices. Qualitative: 40 interviewees in 10 practices.

Main Measures

Interquartile range (IQR) of the proportion of encounters in which a physician completed documentation, for each documentation category. Multilevel linear regression measured the proportion of variation at the physician level.

Key Results

Five clinical documentation categories had substantial and statistically significant (p lt; 0.001) variation at the physician level after accounting for state, organization, and practice levels: (1) discussing results (IQR = 50.8%, proportion of variation explained by physician level = 78.1%); (2) assessment and diagnosis (IQR = 60.4%, physician-level variation = 76.0%); (3) problem list (IQR = 73.1%, physician-level variation = 70.1%); (4) review of systems (IQR = 62.3%, physician-level variation = 67.7%); and (5) social history (IQR = 53.3%, physician-level variation = 62.2%). Drivers of variation from interviews included user preferences and EHR designs with multiple places to record similar information. Variation was perceived to create documentation inefficiencies and risk patient harm due to missed or misinterpreted information. Mitigation strategies included targeted user training during EHR implementation and practice meetings focused on documentation standardization.

Conclusions

Physician-to-physician variation in EHR documentation impedes effective and safe use of EHRs, but there are potential strategies to mitigate negative consequences.

How do you apply evidence?

Take our quick four-question survey to help us curate evidence and insights that serve you.

Take our survey