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Typical Electronic Health Record Use in Primary Care Practices and the Quality of Diabetes Care

Abstract

PURPOSE
Recent efforts to encourage meaningful use of electronic health records (EHRs) assume that widespread adoption will improve the quality of ambulatory care, especially for complex clinical conditions such as diabetes. Cross-sectional studies of typical uses of commercially available ambulatory EHRs provide conflicting evidence for an association between EHR use and improved care, and effects of longer-term EHR use in community-based primary care settings on the quality of care are not well understood.

METHODS
We analyzed data from 16 EHR-using and 26 non–EHR-using practices in 2 northeastern states participating in a group-randomized quality improvement trial. Measures of care were assessed for 798 patients with diabetes. We used hierarchical linear models to examine the relationship between EHR use and adherence to evidence-based diabetes care guidelines, and hierarchical logistic models to compare rates of improvement over 3 years.

RESULTS
EHR use was not associated with better adherence to care guidelines or a more rapid improvement in adherence. In fact, patients in practices that did not use an EHR were more likely than those in practices that used an EHR to meet all of 3 intermediate outcomes targets for hemoglobin A1c, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and blood pressure at the 2-year follow-up (odds ratio = 1.67; 95% CI, 1.12–2.51). Although the quality of care improved across all practices, rates of improvement did not differ between the 2 groups.

CONCLUSIONS
Consistent use of an EHR over 3 years does not ensure successful use for improving the quality of diabetes care. Ongoing efforts to encourage adoption and meaningful use of EHRs in primary care should focus on ensuring that use succeeds in improving care. These efforts will need to include provision of assistance to longer-term EHR users.

Crosson JC, Ohman-Strickland PA, Cohen DJ, Clark EC, Crabtree BF. Typical Electronic Health Record Use in Primary Care Practices and the Quality of Diabetes Care. Ann Fam Med. 2012 May 1;10(3):221–7.

15 May 2012

Bibliographic Data

Title:

Typical Electronic Health Record Use in Primary Care Practices and the Quality of Diabetes Care

Author(s):

Crosson, Jesse C.; Ohman-Strickland, Pamela A.; Cohen, Deborah J.; Clark, Elizabeth C.; Crabtree, Benjamin F.

Journal

The Annals of Family Medicine, 10(3), pp. 221-227
(2012-05-01)

URL:

Full article

DOI:

10.1370/afm.1370

Keyword(s):

Diabetes Mellitus, Electronic Health Records, Electronic Medical Records, Medical Record Systems, Primary Care, Quality, United States

Citation:
Crosson JC, Ohman-Strickland PA, Cohen DJ, Clark EC, Crabtree BF. Typical Electronic Health Record Use in Primary Care Practices and the Quality of Diabetes Care. Ann Fam Med. 2012 May 1;10(3):221–7.

Other Publications

In ICMCC Database

All The Annals of Family Medicine articles (4).

Other article(s) by

Jesse C. Crosson (4).

Elizabeth C. Clark (1).

Benjamin F. Crabtree (2).

Pamela A. Ohman-Strickland (2).

Deborah J. Cohen (1).

Discussion




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Miscellaneous

Affiliated University Institutes

Oregon Health and Sciences University - Department of Family Medicine, USA

UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School - Department of Biostatistics, USA

UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School - Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, USA

Oregon Health and Sciences University - Department of Medical Informatics & Clinical Epidemiology, USA

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PubMed

Jesse C. Crosson
Elizabeth C. Clark
Benjamin F. Crabtree
Pamela A. Ohman-Strickland
Deborah J. Cohen

Google Scholar

Jesse C. Crosson
Elizabeth C. Clark
Benjamin F. Crabtree
Pamela A. Ohman-Strickland
Deborah J. Cohen

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