Litcius/Paper detail

A Scoping Review of Health Information Technology in Clinician Burnout

Danny T Y Wu, Catherine Xu, Abraham Kim, Shwetha Bindhu, Kenneth E. Mah, Mark H. Eckman

2021Applied Clinical Informatics47 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Clinician burnout is a prevalent issue in healthcare, with detrimental implications in healthcare quality and medical costs due to errors. The inefficient use of health information technologies (HIT) is attributed to having a role in burnout. OBJECTIVE: This paper seeks to review the literature with the following two goals: (1) characterize and extract HIT trends in burnout studies over time, and (2) examine the evidence and synthesize themes of HIT's roles in burnout studies. METHODS: A scoping literature review was performed by following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines with two rounds of searches in PubMed, IEEE Xplore, ACM, and Google Scholar. The retrieved papers and their references were screened for eligibility by using developed inclusion and exclusion criteria. Data were extracted from included papers and summarized either statistically or qualitatively to demonstrate patterns. RESULTS: = 16; 44.4%). The most commonly studied variable was electronic health record (EHR) practices (e.g., number of clicks). The most common study population was physicians. HIT played multiple roles in burnout studies: it can contribute to burnout; it can be used to measure burnout; or it can intervene and mitigate burnout levels. CONCLUSION: This scoping review presents trends in HIT-centered burnout studies and synthesizes three roles for HIT in contributing to, measuring, and mitigating burnout. Four recommendations were generated accordingly for future burnout studies: (1) validate and standardize HIT burnout measures; (2) focus on EHR-based solutions to mitigate clinician burnout; (3) expand burnout studies to other specialties and types of healthcare providers, and (4) utilize mobile and tracking technology to study time efficiency.

Topics & Concepts

BurnoutHealth careSystematic reviewMedicineMEDLINEHealth information technologyPopulationPsychologyClinical psychologyEnvironmental healthPolitical scienceLawElectronic Health Records SystemsMobile Health and mHealth ApplicationsHealthcare professionals’ stress and burnout