Becker's Hospital Review

July 2020 Issue of Becker's Hospital Review

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43 CIO / HEALTH IT BECKER'S HEALTHCARE JOIN US ONLINE AT OUR VIRTUAL EVENTS RSVP, WATCH RECAPS AND FIND OUT MORE AT: www.beckersvirtualevents.com MAY 21 JUNE 23 JULY 21 JULY 2020 BECKER'S HOSPITAL REVIEW BECKER'S HOSPITAL REVIEW BECKER'S HOSPITAL REVIEW BECKER'S HOSPITAL REVIEW Becker's Healthcare Health IT + Clinical Leadership + Pharmacy Virtual Event Becker's Healthcare Pediatric Leadership Virtual Forum Becker's Healthcare Supply Chain Leadership Virtual Forum Becker's Health IT + Revenue Cycle Management Virtual Event Available to watch now on demand online. Tuesday, June 23rd, 2020 Tuesday, July 21st, 2020 More details and virtual events coming soon! JUNE 17 BECKER'S SPINE REVIEW Becker's Spine, Orthopedic and Pain Management-Driven ASC + The Future of Spine Virtual Event Wednesday, June 17th - Friday, June 19th, 2020 JUNE 15 BECKER'S DENTAL + DSO REVIEW Becker's Dental + DSO Review Virtual Event Monday, June 15th, 2020 | 12:00 PM CT Study: More than one-third of physicians experience EHR fatigue within first minute of use By Jackie Drees C lick heavy interfaces, multiscreen workflows and scrolling through pages of notes for information are some of the charac- teristics of EHR systems associated with burnout and fatigue, according to a study published June 9 in the Journal of the American Medical Association. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill researchers conducted a simulation-based EHR usability assessment between March 20 to April 5, 2018, to assess intensive care unit physicians' fatigue and efficien- cy with using the EHR. e assessment comprised 25 ICU physicians and physician trainees at a southeastern U.S. academic medical center, who completed four simulation patient cases in the Epic EHR system that involved retrieving information and completing tasks while wear- ing eye-tracking glasses, which recorded participants' pupil diameters during the study. e researchers measured physicians' fatigue by pupillometry, the mea- surement of pupil size and reactivity, with lower scores indicating greater fatigue. EHR efficiency was discerned by task completion times, number of mouse clicks and number of screens visited during the simulation. During the course of the assessment, the physicians recorded a total of 14 hours and 27 minutes of EHR activity. Results of the analysis showed that all physician participants experienced physiological fatigue at least once during the exercise, and 80 percent experienced fatigue aer the first 22 minutes of EHR use. irty-six percent of participants experienced fatigue within the first minute of the study, and 64 percent experienced fatigue within the first 20 min- utes of use. Physicians who experienced EHR-related fatigue during a patient case were then less efficient in the next patient case, generating longer task completion times, higher numbers of mouse clicks and more EHR screen visits. Study authors concluded that the high rates of fatigue among ICU phy- sicians during short periods of EHR simulation has a negative effect on EHR efficiency and that more research is needed to examine the under- lying causes of EHR-associated fatigue. n

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