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25 × 5 Symposium to Reduce Documentation Burden: Report-out and Call for Action

Mollie Hobensack, Deborah R Levy, Kenrick Cato, Don E. Detmer, Kevin B. Johnson, J Williamson, Judy Murphy, Amanda J Moy, Jennifer Withall, Rachel Lee, Sarah Collins Rossetti, Samuel Trent Rosenbloom

2022Applied Clinical Informatics36 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The widespread adoption of electronic health records and a simultaneous increase in regulatory demands have led to an acceleration of documentation requirements among clinicians. The corresponding burden from documentation requirements is a central contributor to clinician burnout and can lead to an increased risk of suboptimal patient care. OBJECTIVE: (Symposium) was organized to provide a forum for experts to discuss the current state of documentation burden and to identify specific actions aimed at dramatically reducing documentation burden for clinicians. METHODS: The Symposium consisted of six weekly sessions with 33 presentations. The first four sessions included panel presentations discussing the challenges related to documentation burden. The final two sessions consisted of breakout groups aimed at engaging attendees in establishing interventions for reducing clinical documentation burden. Steering Committee members analyzed notes from each breakout group to develop a list of action items. RESULTS: among three stakeholder groups: Providers and Health Systems, Vendors, and Policy and Advocacy Groups. Action items were then categorized into as short-, medium-, or long-term goals. Themes that emerged from the breakout groups' notes include the following: accountability, evidence is critical, education and training, innovation of technology, and other miscellaneous goals (e.g., vendors will improve shared knowledge databases). CONCLUSION: The Symposium successfully generated a list of interventions for short-, medium-, and long-term timeframes as a launching point to address documentation burden in explicit action-oriented ways. Addressing interventions to reduce undue documentation burden placed on clinicians will necessitate collaboration among all stakeholders.

Topics & Concepts

DocumentationPsychological interventionMedicineBreakoutStakeholderHealth careMedical educationNursingPublic relationsBusinessComputer sciencePolitical scienceLawProgramming languageFinanceElectronic Health Records SystemsNursing Diagnosis and DocumentationHealth Sciences Research and Education
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