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BackgroundThe case has historically been presented that structured and/or coded electronic health records (EHRs) benefit direct patient care, but the evidence base for this is not well documented.MethodsWe searched for evidence of direct patient care value from the use of structured and/or coded information within EHRs. We interrogated nine international databases from 1990 to 2011. Value was defined using the Institute of Medicine's six areas for improvement for healthcare systems: effectiveness, safety, patient-centredness, timeliness, efficiency and equitability. We included studies satisfying the Cochrane Effective Practice and Organisation of Care (EPOC) group criteria.ResultsOf 5016 potentially eligible papers, 13 studies satisfied our criteria: 10 focused on effectiveness, with eight demonstrating potential for improved proxy and actual clinical outcomes if a structured and/or coded EHR was combined with alerting or advisory systems in a focused clinical domain. Three studies demonstrated improvement in safety outcomes. No studies were found reporting value in relation to patient-centredness, timeliness, efficiency or equitability.ConclusionsWe conclude that, to date, there has been patchy effort to investigate empirically the value from structuring and coding EHRs for direct patient care. Future investments in structuring and coding of EHRs should be informed by robust evidence as to the clinical scenarios in which patient care benefits may be realised.

Original publication

DOI

10.14236/jhi.v20i3.22

Type

Journal article

Journal

Informatics in primary care

Publication Date

01/2012

Volume

20

Pages

171 - 180

Addresses

Centre for Health Informatics and Multiprofessional Education, University College London, UK. d.kalra@ucl.ac.uk

Keywords

Humans, Medical Informatics, Primary Health Care, Delivery of Health Care, Evidence-Based Practice, Electronic Health Records, Clinical Coding