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ObjectiveTo understand the medium-term consequences of implementing commercially procured computerized physician order entry (CPOE) and clinical decision support (CDS) systems in 'early adopter' hospitals.Materials and methodsIn-depth, qualitative case study in two hospitals using a CPOE or a CDS system for at least 2 years. Both hospitals had implemented commercially available systems. Hospital A had implemented a CPOE system (with basic decision support), whereas hospital B invested additional resources in a CDS system that facilitated order entry but which was integrated with electronic health records and offered more advanced CDS. We used a combination of documentary analysis of the implementation plans, audiorecorded semistructured interviews with system users, and observations of strategic meetings and systems usage.ResultsWe collected 11 documents, conducted 43 interviews, and conducted a total of 21.5 h of observations. We identified three major themes: (1) impacts on individual users, including greater legibility of prescriptions, but also some accounts of increased workloads; (2) the introduction of perceived new safety risks related to accessibility and usability of hardware and software, with users expressing concerns that some problems such as duplicate prescribing were more likely to occur; and (3) realizing organizational benefits through secondary uses of data.ConclusionsWe identified little difference in the medium-term consequences of a CPOE and a CDS system. It is important that future studies investigate the medium- and longer-term consequences of CPOE and CDS systems in a wider range of hospitals.

Original publication

DOI

10.1136/amiajnl-2013-002252

Type

Journal article

Journal

Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association : JAMIA

Publication Date

10/2014

Volume

21

Pages

e194 - e202

Addresses

School of Health in Social Science, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.

Keywords

Humans, Drug Therapy, Computer-Assisted, Medication Errors, User-Computer Interface, Decision Support Systems, Clinical, Medication Systems, Hospital, Medical Order Entry Systems, Interviews as Topic, Electronic Health Records, Quality Improvement, United Kingdom