Litcius/Paper detail

Computerized Capability of Office-Based Physicians to Identify Patients Who Need Preventive or Follow-up Care — United States, 2017

Damon F. Ogburn, Brian Ward, Alicia Ward

2020MMWR Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Preventive care or follow-up care have the potential to improve health outcomes, reduce disease in the population, and decrease health care costs in the long-term (1). Approximately one half of persons in the United States receive general recommended preventive services (2,3). Missed physician appointments can hinder the receipt of needed health care (4). With electronic health record (EHR) systems able to improve interaction and communication between patients and providers (5), electronic reminders are used to decrease missed care. These reminders can improve various types of preventive and follow-up care, such as immunizations (6) and cancer screening (7); however, computerized capability must exist to make use of these reminders. To examine this capability among U.S. office-based physicians, data from the National Electronic Health Records Survey (NEHRS) for 2017, the most recent data available, were analyzed. An estimated 64.7% of office-based physicians had computerized capability to identify patients who were due for preventive or follow-up care, with 72.9% of primary care physicians and 71.4% of physicians with an EHR system having this capability compared with surgeons (54.8%), nonprimary care physicians (58.5%), and physicians without an EHR system (23.4%). Having an EHR system is associated with the ability to send electronic reminders to increase receipt of preventive or follow-up care, which has been shown to improve patient health outcomes (8).

Topics & Concepts

MedicineReceiptPreventive careFamily medicineHealth careElectronic health recordPreventive healthcareMedical emergencyPopulationMEDLINEHealth information technologyHealth maintenanceNursingPublic healthEnvironmental healthWorld Wide WebEconomic growthComputer scienceEconomicsPolitical scienceLawMobile Health and mHealth ApplicationsPrimary Care and Health OutcomesHealth Promotion and Cardiovascular Prevention