The use of electronic medical records to boost patient/provider communication
Tom Creer, PhD
January 14, 2008
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Electronic medical records (EMRs) are widely used in healthcare systems, though the debate concerning their impact on patient-provider communication remains unresolved. Arar and coworkers sought to find whether providers' use of the EMR would improve patient/provider communication concerning self-care during the medical encounter in a cross-sectional, observational study. A primary-care outpatient clinic of the South Texas Veterans Health Care System provided the setting. A convenience sample of 50 patient/physician encounters was videotaped, transcribed, and analyzed to determine the time that the physician spent using the EMR and discussing self-care topics. Self-care topics included medication use, recognition of disease symptoms, diet, exercise, management of physical and emotional distress, self-monitoring activities, cigarette smoking, alcohol consumption, and family support/community resources. Two observers independently coded for the kind of self-care topics using a software package. Results showed that encounters averaged 22.6 minutes. Two encounter types were identified based on EMR usage: low use (n = 13), with EMR use of two minutes or less, and moderate to high EMR use (n = 37), with EMR use of five minutes or more. The average time for encounters was 25 minutes for moderate to high EMR use encounters and 16 minutes for low EMR use encounters. Issues pertaining to facets of self-management were discussed in every physician-patient interaction. The most frequently discussed self-care topics were medication use (100 percent), physical distress (76 percent), and disease symptoms (76 percent). Self-monitoring activities, exercise, and diet were discussed in 62 percent, 60 percent, and 46 percent of the 50 encounters, respectively. Emotional distress (26 percent), smoking (30 percent), family support/community resources (26 percent), and alcohol consumption (20 percent) were the least discussed issues. Encounters were similar with respect to the kinds of self-care elements discussed. However, EMR use encounters were more likely to include a higher number of self-care topics raised by physicians than low EMR use encounters, particularly regarding disease symptoms and physical distress. A significant correlation was observed between the number of self-care elements discussed and time spent on the EMR, but no correlation was observed between the length of the encounter and self-care discussion.

VALUE OF STUDY TO READER: The authors concluded that the use of an EMR during encounters was associated with an increase in the number of self-care topics raised by physicians. EMRs offered the opportunity to involve patients and physicians in discussion of self-care during patients' visits. Given the current emphasis on the widespread implementation of these records, future EMRs should be designed to systematically facilitate the integration of EMRs into clinical exchanges about self-care. These encounters would be particularly useful following self-management training.

NH Arar et al. Self-Care Communication during Medical Encounters: Implications for Future Electronic Medical Records. Perspectives in Health Information Management, 2006;3:3.

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