HITECH to 21st Century Cures: Clinician Burden and Evolving Health IT Policy

Gettinger, Andrew; Zayas-Cabán, Teresa

HITECH to 21st Century Cures: Clinician Burden and Evolving Health IT Policy

Gettinger, Andrew; Zayas-Cabán, Teresa

Abstract

Adoption and use of health information technology (IT) was identified as 1 solution to quality and safety issues that permeate the United States health care system. Implementation of health IT has accelerated across the US over the past decade, in part, as a result of legislative and regulatory requirements and incentives. However, adoption of these systems has burdened clinician users due to design, configuration, and implementation issues, resulting in poor usability, challenges to workflow integration, and cumbersome documentation requirements. The path to alleviating these clinician burdens requires a clear understanding of the intent and evolution of pertinent regulations and the context in which they exist. This article reviews the Office of the National Coordinator of Health Information Technology’s efforts, documents current regulatory actions, and discusses additional policy opportunities that can further improve clinician satisfaction and effectiveness in providing health care with health IT that is an asset, not an obstacle.

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Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association : JAMIA
2021
Profession(s)
Physicians
Topic(s)
Policy
Resource Types
Commentaries & Blogs
Study Type(s)
Expert Opinion, Commentary, etc.
Action Strategy Area(s)
Workload & Workflows
Setting(s)
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Academic Role(s)
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