Health Aff (Millwood). 2024 Nov;43(11):1538-1545. doi: 10.1377/hlthaff.2024.00398.
ABSTRACT
Although electronic health record (EHR) documentation burden is known to be associated with reduced clinician well-being and burnout, it may have even worse unintended consequences if documentation work also crowds out other high-value EHR tasks. We examined this possibility by assessing the relationship between documentation burden and a high-value but optional EHR task: the use of health information exchange (HIE) to view patient records from outside organizations. Our study took advantage of an exogenous shock to documentation time: appointment no-shows. We found that documentation time had a strong impact on HIE use, with each additional hour spent documenting resulting in a 7.1 percent reduction in the proportion of patients with an outside record viewed by the primary care physician seeing them that day. Our results point to the urgent need for policy makers to do more to reduce documentation burden.
PMID:39496090 | DOI:10.1377/hlthaff.2024.00398