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Trends in user-initiated health information exchange in the inpatient, outpatient, and emergency settings

Saurabh Rahurkar, Joshua R. Vest, John T Finnell, Brian E. Dixon

2020Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Prior research on health information exchange (HIE) typically measured provider usage through surveys or they summarized the availability of HIE services in a healthcare organization. Few studies utilized user log files. Using HIE access log files, we measured HIE use in real-world clinical settings over a 7-year period (2011-2017). Use of HIE increased in inpatient, outpatient, and emergency department (ED) settings. Further, while extant literature has generally viewed the ED as the most relevant setting for HIE, the greatest change in HIE use was observed in the inpatient setting, followed by the ED setting and then the outpatient setting. Our findings suggest that in addition to federal incentives, the implementation of features that address barriers to access (eg, Single Sign On), as well as value-added services (eg, interoperability with external data sources), may be related to the growth in user-initiated HIE.

Topics & Concepts

Health information exchangeMedical emergencyEmergency departmentMedicineHealth informationEmergency medicineData scienceHealth careComputer scienceNursingPolitical scienceLawElectronic Health Records SystemsHealthcare Systems and TechnologyHealth Literacy and Information Accessibility
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