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Differences in physician electronic health record use by telemedicine intensity: evidence from 2 academic medical centers. | LitMetric

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Article Abstract

Objective: Evaluate the association between telemedicine intensity and ambulatory physician electronic health record (EHR) use following the COVID-19 pandemic.

Materials And Methods: This retrospective study included ambulatory physicians in 11 specialties at 2 large academic medical centers (Washington University in St Louis [WashU], University of California San Francisco [UCSF]). EHR use measures, including time-based and frequency-based, were analyzed in the post-COVID-19 period (March 1, 2021, through March 7, 2022). Multivariable regression models with 2-way fixed effects were used to assess the association between telemedicine intensity and EHR use.

Results: Fully telemedicine physician-weeks were associated with higher EHR (hours per 8 patient scheduled hours; β = 3.2 at WashU, β = 1.4 at UCSF; P < .001) and documentation time (β = 2.7 at WashU, β = 1.4 at UCSF; P < .001). Several differences in discrete EHR-based tasks were observed: fully telemedicine physician-days were associated with lesser ordering, and there were mixed patterns for information seeking and clinical communication tasks.

Discussion: Expanded use of telemedicine was associated with significant changes in physician EHR use post-COVID-19 onset. Increased EHR time may suggest a shift in workload, whereas decreased ordering may suggest constraints in virtual care, such as ability to perform physical examination and the reliance on patient-reported symptoms. Institutional differences usage patterns suggest that telemedicine's impact is context-specific and provides opportunities for understanding how to optimize EHRs to support telemedicine.

Conclusion: Telemedicine shifts physician EHR. Supporting physicians through optimized EHR tools, tailored workflows, and team-based interventions is essential for sustainable virtual care delivery without exacerbating EHR burden.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12361853PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jamia/ocaf122DOI Listing

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