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Search All Research Studies
AHRQ Research Studies Date
Topics
- Adverse Events (1)
- Blood Clots (1)
- Caregiving (2)
- Care Management (3)
- Children/Adolescents (1)
- Clinical Decision Support (CDS) (3)
- Clinician-Patient Communication (4)
- Communication (5)
- Diabetes (1)
- Diagnostic Safety and Quality (1)
- Disparities (1)
- Education: Patient and Caregiver (1)
- Electronic Health Records (EHRs) (11)
- (-) Health Information Technology (HIT) (28)
- Health Literacy (2)
- Hospitalization (6)
- Hospitals (3)
- (-) Inpatient Care (28)
- Medical Errors (1)
- Medication (3)
- Opioids (1)
- Patient-Centered Healthcare (2)
- Patient and Family Engagement (6)
- Patient Experience (3)
- Patient Safety (6)
- Prevention (1)
- Racial and Ethnic Minorities (1)
- Shared Decision Making (1)
- Surgery (1)
- Teams (1)
- Telehealth (1)
- Web-Based (4)
AHRQ Research Studies
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Research Studies is a compilation of published research articles funded by AHRQ or authored by AHRQ researchers.
Results
1 to 25 of 28 Research Studies DisplayedRolfzen ML, Wick A, Mascha EJ
Best Practice Alerts Informed by Inpatient Opioid Intake to Reduce Opioid Prescribing after Surgery (PRIOR): a cluster randomized multiple crossover trial.
This study tested the hypothesis that a decision-support tool embedded in electronic health records (EHRs) leads clinicians to prescribe fewer opioids at discharge after inpatient surgery. Over 21,000 surgical inpatient discharges in a cluster randomized multiple crossover trial in four Colorado hospitals were included. The results indicated that within the context of vigorous opioid education and awareness efforts a decision-support tool incorporated into EHRs did not reduce discharge opioid prescribing for postoperative patients. The authors concluded that opioid prescribing alerts might be valuable in other contexts.
AHRQ-funded; HS027795.
Citation: Rolfzen ML, Wick A, Mascha EJ .
Best Practice Alerts Informed by Inpatient Opioid Intake to Reduce Opioid Prescribing after Surgery (PRIOR): a cluster randomized multiple crossover trial.
Anesthesiology 2023 Aug 1; 139(2):186-96. doi: 10.1097/aln.0000000000004607..
Keywords: Opioids, Medication, Surgery, Inpatient Care, Clinical Decision Support (CDS), Health Information Technology (HIT)
McAlearney AS, Hefner JL, MacEwan SR
Care Team perspectives about an inpatient portal: benefits and challenges of patients' portal use during hospitalization.
This study’s goal was to get care team member’s point of view on the benefits and challenges of inpatient portal implementation and use. Brief in-person interviews with 433 care team members across a six-hospital health system were held to explore opinions about patients’ use. The Inpatient Portal Evaluation Framework was used to characterize benefits and challenges of portal use that care team members reported affected patients, themselves, and the collaborative work of those care teams with their patients.
AHRQ-funded; HS024379; HS024091; HS024767.
Citation: McAlearney AS, Hefner JL, MacEwan SR .
Care Team perspectives about an inpatient portal: benefits and challenges of patients' portal use during hospitalization.
Med Care Res Rev 2021 Oct;78(5):537-47. doi: 10.1177/1077558720925296..
Keywords: Teams, Health Information Technology (HIT), Inpatient Care
Acharya C, Sehrawat TS, McGuire DB
Perspectives of inpatients with cirrhosis and caregivers on using health information technology: cross-sectional multicenter study.
Perspectives of inpatients with cirrhosis and caregivers on using health information technology: cross-sectional multicenter study.
J Med Internet Res 2021 Apr 9;23(4):e24639. doi: 10.2196/24639.
This cross-sectional multicenter study examined reasons why health IT interventions were refused among patient-caregiver dyads of inpatients with cirrhosis. A total of 349 patient-caregiver dyads at three Virginia hospitals were approached of which 87 (25%) agreed to participate. Patients with cirrhosis admitted with gastrointestinal bleeding without opioid use or hepatic encephalopathy were more likely to participate than those with opioid or alcohol-related etiologies. Privacy was not a major factor in refusal, but caregiver and study burden were.
J Med Internet Res 2021 Apr 9;23(4):e24639. doi: 10.2196/24639.
This cross-sectional multicenter study examined reasons why health IT interventions were refused among patient-caregiver dyads of inpatients with cirrhosis. A total of 349 patient-caregiver dyads at three Virginia hospitals were approached of which 87 (25%) agreed to participate. Patients with cirrhosis admitted with gastrointestinal bleeding without opioid use or hepatic encephalopathy were more likely to participate than those with opioid or alcohol-related etiologies. Privacy was not a major factor in refusal, but caregiver and study burden were.
AHRQ-funded; HS025412.
Citation: Acharya C, Sehrawat TS, McGuire DB .
Perspectives of inpatients with cirrhosis and caregivers on using health information technology: cross-sectional multicenter study.
J Med Internet Res 2021 Apr 9;23(4):e24639. doi: 10.2196/24639..
Keywords: Health Information Technology (HIT), Caregiving, Inpatient Care
MacEwan SR, Gaughan A, Hefner JL
Identifying the role of inpatient portals to support health literacy: perspectives from patients and care team members.
Health literacy is a fundamental contributor to an individual's ability to self-manage their health and appropriately use health care services. Tools that positively impact health literacy therefore have potential to improve health outcomes. Inpatient portals are a tool that provides patients an opportunity to cultivate health literacy skills during hospitalization. This study investigated how inpatient portal use could impact attributes of health literacy.
AHRQ-funded; HS024091; HS024767; HS024379.
Citation: MacEwan SR, Gaughan A, Hefner JL .
Identifying the role of inpatient portals to support health literacy: perspectives from patients and care team members.
Patient Educ Couns 2021 Apr;104(4):836-43. doi: 10.1016/j.pec.2020.09.028..
Keywords: Health Literacy, Health Information Technology (HIT), Hospitalization, Inpatient Care
Kelly MM, Smith CA, Hoonakker PLT
Stakeholder perspectives in anticipation of sharing physicians' notes with parents of hospitalized children.
Researchers sought to elicit stakeholder perspectives on the anticipated benefits and challenges of sharing hospital physicians' admission and daily progress notes with parents at the bedside during their child's hospitalization and to identify strategies to aid implementation of inpatient note sharing. Focus groups with 34 stakeholders at a children's hospital were conducted. The researchers identified four anticipated benefits of sharing inpatient notes, five expected challenges, and three suggested implementation strategies.
Citation: Kelly MM, Smith CA, Hoonakker PLT .
Stakeholder perspectives in anticipation of sharing physicians' notes with parents of hospitalized children.
Acad Pediatr 2021 Mar;21(2):259-64. doi: 10.1016/j.acap.2020.11.018..
Keywords: Children/Adolescents, Inpatient Care, Electronic Health Records (EHRs), Health Information Technology (HIT), Communication, Clinician-Patient Communication
Haldar S, Khelifi M, Mishra SR
Designing inpatient portals to support patient agency and dynamic hospital experiences.
Inpatient portals could help patients engage in their hospital care, yet several design, usability, and adoption issues prevent this technology from fulfilling its potential. Despite patients having needs that extend beyond the scope of existing inpatient portals, we know less about how to design such portals that support them. To learn about effective designs, the investigators created three mid-fidelity prototypes representing novel approaches for inpatient portal design.
AHRQ-funded; HS022894.
Citation: Haldar S, Khelifi M, Mishra SR .
Designing inpatient portals to support patient agency and dynamic hospital experiences.
AMIA Annu Symp Proc 2021 Jan 25;2021:524-33..
Keywords: Patient Experience, Inpatient Care, Health Information Technology (HIT), Hospitals
McAlearney AS, Walker DM, Gaughan A
Helping patients be better patients: a qualitative study of perceptions about inpatient portal use.
This qualitative study looked at perceptions about inpatient portal use and its impact on patient experience and the care process. The authors interviewed 120 patients and 433 care team members across a seven-hospital academic medical center that offers an inpatient portal to hospitalized patients. Care team members felt the inpatient portal helped patients be “better patients” by improving their ability to be informed about their health and enabling them to be more involved in the care process. The care team members suggested portal use could be improved by addressing challenges with tablet administration, use of the patient education feature, and the functionality of the scheduling feature.
AHRQ-funded; HS024379; HS024091.
Citation: McAlearney AS, Walker DM, Gaughan A .
Helping patients be better patients: a qualitative study of perceptions about inpatient portal use.
Telemed J E Health 2020 Sep;26(9):1184-87. doi: 10.1089/tmj.2019.0198..
Keywords: Telehealth, Health Information Technology (HIT), Patient and Family Engagement, Clinician-Patient Communication, Communication, Inpatient Care, Hospitals
Furukawa MF, Eldridge N, Wang Y
AHRQ Author: Furukawa MF, Eldridge N
Electronic health record adoption and rates of in-hospital adverse events.
Researchers examined the association of hospitals' electronic health record (EHR) adoption and occurrence rates of adverse events among exposed patients. The study included patients hospitalized for acute cardiovascular disease, pneumonia, or conditions requiring surgery. The researchers found that patients exposed to a fully electronic EHR were less likely to experience in-hospital adverse events.
AHRQ-authored.
Citation: Furukawa MF, Eldridge N, Wang Y .
Electronic health record adoption and rates of in-hospital adverse events.
J Patient Saf 2020 Jun;16(2):137-42. doi: 10.1097/pts.0000000000000257..
Keywords: Electronic Health Records (EHRs), Health Information Technology (HIT), Adverse Events, Inpatient Care, Hospitals, Patient Safety
Collins SA, Couture B, Smith AD
Mixed-methods evaluation of real-time safety reporting by hospitalized patients and their care partners: the MySafeCare application.
This study evaluated the effectiveness of a real-time safety reporting tool by hospitalized patients and their care partners compared with other reporting mechanisms. The study used mixed methods including 20-month preimplementation and postimplementation trials evaluating MySafeCare, a web-based applications which allows real time reporting by hospitalized patients/care partners. Submission rates to MySafeCare in three hospital units (oncology acute care, vascular intermediate care, medical intensive care) were compared to submission rates to the Patient Family Relations (PFR) Department, a hospital service to address family/patient concerns. Thirty-two MySafeCare submissions were received during the study period with an average rate of 1.7 submissions per 1000 patient-days. MySafeCare submission rates were significantly higher than PFR submission rates during the postintervention period on the vascular unit. PFR submissions decreased after MySafeCare implementation for all units.
AHRQ-funded; HS023535.
Citation: Collins SA, Couture B, Smith AD .
Mixed-methods evaluation of real-time safety reporting by hospitalized patients and their care partners: the MySafeCare application.
J Patient Saf 2020 Jun;16(2):e75-e81. doi: 10.1097/pts.0000000000000493..
Keywords: Patient Safety, Hospitalization, Inpatient Care, Health Information Technology (HIT), Caregiving
Walker DM, Hefner JL, Fareed N
Exploring the digital divide: age and race disparities in use of an inpatient portal.
Age and race disparities in the use of new technologies-the digital divide-may be limiting the potential of patient-facing health information technology to improve health and health care. The objective of this study was to investigate whether disparities exist in the use of patient portals designed specifically for the inpatient environment. The investigators identified lower use of the inpatient portal among African American and older patients, relative to White and younger patients, respectively.
AHRQ-funded; HS024379; HS024091; HS024349.
Citation: Walker DM, Hefner JL, Fareed N .
Exploring the digital divide: age and race disparities in use of an inpatient portal.
Telemed J E Health 2020 May;26(5):603-13. doi: 10.1089/tmj.2019.0065..
Keywords: Racial and Ethnic Minorities, Disparities, Health Information Technology (HIT), Inpatient Care, Hospitalization
Owodunni OP, Haut ER, Shaffer DL
Using electronic health record system triggers to target delivery of a patient-centered intervention to improve venous thromboembolism prevention for hospitalized patients: is there a differential effect by race?
Venous thromboembolism (VTE) is a leading cause of preventable harm, and disparities observed in prevention practices. In this study, the investigators examined the impact of a patient-centered VTE education bundle on the non-administration of preventive prophylaxis by race. The investigators found that the patient education materials, developed collaboratively with a diverse group of patients, improved patient's understanding and the importance of VTE prevention through prophylaxis.
AHRQ-funded; HS024547.
Citation: Owodunni OP, Haut ER, Shaffer DL .
Using electronic health record system triggers to target delivery of a patient-centered intervention to improve venous thromboembolism prevention for hospitalized patients: is there a differential effect by race?
PLoS One 2020 Jan 16;15(1):e0227339. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0227339..
Keywords: Electronic Health Records (EHRs), Health Information Technology (HIT), Patient-Centered Healthcare, Blood Clots, Prevention, Inpatient Care, Health Literacy, Education: Patient and Caregiver
Schnock KO, Snyder JE, Fuller TE
Acute care patient portal intervention: portal use and patient activation.
The aim of this study was to describe the use of an acute care patient portal and investigate its association with patient and care partner activation in the hospital setting. The investigators concluded that portal users most often accessed the portal to view their clinical information, though portal usage was limited to only the first few days of enrollment. They found an association between the use of the portal and HIT tools with improved levels of patient activation.
AHRQ-funded; HS023535.
Citation: Schnock KO, Snyder JE, Fuller TE .
Acute care patient portal intervention: portal use and patient activation.
J Med Internet Res 2019 Jul 18;21(7):e13336. doi: 10.2196/13336..
Keywords: Electronic Health Records (EHRs), Health Information Technology (HIT), Patient and Family Engagement, Patient-Centered Healthcare, Inpatient Care
Masterson Creber RM, Grossman LV, Ryan B
Engaging hospitalized patients with personalized health information: a randomized trial of an inpatient portal.
This study examined the effects of an inpatient portal intervention on patient activation, patient satisfaction, patient engagement with health information, and 30-day hospital admissions. A randomized trial was conducted from March 2014 to May 2017 with 426 English- or Spanish-speaking patients from 2 cardiac medical-surgical units at an urban academic medical center. Patients were randomized into 3 groups: 1) usual care, 2) tablet with general Internet access, and 3) tablet with an inpatient portal. There was a difference in patient activation between the 3 groups, but the inpatient portal group had lower 30-day hospital admissions. There was also a difference with patient engagement with health information between the inpatient portal and tablet-only groups.
AHRQ-funded; HS021816.
Citation: Masterson Creber RM, Grossman LV, Ryan B .
Engaging hospitalized patients with personalized health information: a randomized trial of an inpatient portal.
J Am Med Inform Assoc 2019 Feb;26(2):115-23. doi: 10.1093/jamia/ocy146..
Keywords: Patient and Family Engagement, Electronic Health Records (EHRs), Health Information Technology (HIT), Hospitalization, Patient Experience, Inpatient Care
Sieck CJ, Walker DM, Hefner JL
Understanding secure messaging in the inpatient environment: a new avenue for communication and patient engagement.
Patient portals, and the secure messaging feature in particular, have been studied in the outpatient setting, but research in the inpatient setting is relatively less mature. In this study, the investigators analyzed and categorized messages sent within an inpatient portal to understand the topics discussed in secure messaging in the inpatient environment. They concluded that their analysis of secure message content suggested certain message types and topics such as Alerts/Requests and Questions about symptoms and treatment plans were particularly important to patients.
AHRQ-funded; HS024091; HS024349; HS024379.
Citation: Sieck CJ, Walker DM, Hefner JL .
Understanding secure messaging in the inpatient environment: a new avenue for communication and patient engagement.
Appl Clin Inform 2018 Oct;9(4):860-68. doi: 10.1055/s-0038-1675814..
Keywords: Clinician-Patient Communication, Communication, Electronic Health Records (EHRs), Health Information Technology (HIT), Inpatient Care, Patient and Family Engagement
Hefner JL, Sieck CJ, McAlearney AS
Training to optimize collaborative use of an inpatient portal.
Inpatient portals are an emerging technology that can facilitate collaborative interactions between patients and care teams, but little is known about how organizations attempt to implement and facilitate inpatient portal use for their providers. The investigators found that interviews with 220 care team members and 4 IT staff identified 3 new areas of training needed to optimize inpatient portal implementation and use that extend beyond training to use other technologies.
AHRQ-funded; HS024379; HS024091; HS024767.
Citation: Hefner JL, Sieck CJ, McAlearney AS .
Training to optimize collaborative use of an inpatient portal.
Appl Clin Inform 2018 Jul;9(3):558-64. doi: 10.1055/s-0038-1666993..
Keywords: Health Information Technology (HIT), Clinician-Patient Communication, Communication, Inpatient Care
Nanji KC, Seger DL, Slight SP
Medication-related clinical decision support alert overrides in inpatients.
This study examined the use of medical-related clinical decision support alert overrides by clinicians in hospital inpatient settings. Overall, almost three-quarters of alerts were overridden, with 40% of them not being appropriate. The majority of overrides dealing with duplicate drug, patient allergy or formulary substitution alerts were appropriate but very few for renal- or age-based were. The authors concluded that research should be done to optimize alert types and frequencies to reduce alarm fatigue.
AHRQ-funded; HS024764.
Citation: Nanji KC, Seger DL, Slight SP .
Medication-related clinical decision support alert overrides in inpatients.
J Am Med Inform Assoc 2018 May;25(5):476-81. doi: 10.1093/jamia/ocx115..
Keywords: Clinical Decision Support (CDS), Shared Decision Making, Health Information Technology (HIT), Inpatient Care, Medication
Yen PY, Walker DM, Smith JMG
Usability evaluation of a commercial inpatient portal.
The authors aimed to understand how users interact with, learn to use, and communicate with their providers through an inpatient portal. They found that participants frequently made operational errors in navigation and assuming non-existent functionalities; participants' learning styles varied, with age as a potential factor that influenced how they learned MyChart Bedside; and participants preferred to message providers individually and wanted feedback on status. They concluded that, for inpatient portals to be effective in promoting patient engagement, it remains critical for technology developers and hospital administrators to understand how users interact with this technology and the resources that may be necessary to support its use.
AHRQ-funded; HS024091.
Citation: Yen PY, Walker DM, Smith JMG .
Usability evaluation of a commercial inpatient portal.
Int J Med Inform 2018 Feb;110:10-18. doi: 10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2017.11.007.
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Keywords: Electronic Health Records (EHRs), Health Information Technology (HIT), Inpatient Care, Patient and Family Engagement, Web-Based
Walker DM, Menser T, Yen PY
Optimizing the user experience: identifying opportunities to improve use of an inpatient portal.
This study aimed to evaluate the user experience associated with an inpatient portal. The authors concluded that inpatient portals may be an effective tool to improve the patient experience in the hospital and making this technology available to inpatients may help to foster ongoing use of technology across the care continuum. However, deriving the benefits from the technology requires appropriate support. The investigators identified multiple opportunities for hospital management to intervene.
AHRQ-funded; HS024091; HS024349.
Citation: Walker DM, Menser T, Yen PY .
Optimizing the user experience: identifying opportunities to improve use of an inpatient portal.
Appl Clin Inform 2018 Jan;9(1):105-13. doi: 10.1055/s-0037-1621732..
Keywords: Health Information Technology (HIT), Inpatient Care, Patient Experience, Web-Based
Payne TH, Alonso WD, Markiel JA
Using voice to create hospital progress notes: description of a mobile application and supporting system integrated with a commercial electronic health record.
The authors described the development and design of a smartphone app-based system to create inpatient progress notes using voice, commercial automatic speech recognition software, with text processing to recognize spoken voice commands and format the note, and integration with a commercial EHR. They found the system to be generally very reliable, accepted by physician users, and secure. They concluded that this approach provides an alternative to the use of keyboard and templates to create progress notes and may appeal to physicians who prefer voice to typing.
AHRQ-funded; HS023631.
Citation: Payne TH, Alonso WD, Markiel JA .
Using voice to create hospital progress notes: description of a mobile application and supporting system integrated with a commercial electronic health record.
J Biomed Inform 2018 Jan;77:91-96. doi: 10.1016/j.jbi.2017.12.004.
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Keywords: Health Information Technology (HIT), Inpatient Care, Electronic Health Records (EHRs)
Huerta TR, McAlearney AS, Rizer MK
Introducing a patient portal and electronic tablets to inpatient care.
The researchers implemented a pilot inpatient portal (MyChart Bedside [Epic Systems]) using Android tablets to provide patients and their families and caregivers with an expected care plan each day, a roster of the care team, the ability to exchange secure messages with the care team, a way to write and save notes, and access to health information. They conducted the 90-day pilot program in 15 rooms on 1 patient unit in each of 2 hospitals and gave tablets to 179 patients. They found that patients wanted immediate access to laboratory results, that patients admitted for 1-2 days found the tablets less important, that those readmitted insisted on having a tablet, and that those with their own electronic devices were less likely to accept the tablet.
AHRQ-funded; HS024091.
Citation: Huerta TR, McAlearney AS, Rizer MK .
Introducing a patient portal and electronic tablets to inpatient care.
Ann Intern Med 2017 Dec 5;167(11):816-17. doi: 10.7326/m17-1766.
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Keywords: Health Information Technology (HIT), Hospitalization, Inpatient Care, Web-Based, Electronic Health Records (EHRs)
Bowen ME, Rumana U, Kilgore EA
A user-centered glucose-insulin data display for the inpatient setting.
Researchers sought to develop a set of user-centered displays of capillary glucose data and insulin dose to improve inpatient management of insulin-dependent diabetes. Their proposed conceptual data display prototype is designed to simplify the presentation and visualization of key information needed for treatment decisions. The goal is also to enhance clinician's ability to identify opportunities to optimize insulin dosing and decrease end users' cognitive load and error rates.
AHRQ-funded; HS022895.
Citation: Bowen ME, Rumana U, Kilgore EA .
A user-centered glucose-insulin data display for the inpatient setting.
Stud Health Technol Inform 2017;245:684-88.
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Keywords: Care Management, Diabetes, Health Information Technology (HIT), Inpatient Care, Patient Safety
Singh H, Zwaan L
Annals for hospitalists inpatient notes - Reducing diagnostic error-a new horizon of opportunities for hospital medicine.
The authors argue that given the importance of diagnoses in the hospital, hospitalists are well-positioned to lead efforts to promote correct and timely diagnosis. However, to reduce harms from diagnostic errors, hospitalists must first understand how these errors occur and then develop practical strategies to avoid them.
AHRQ-funded; HS022087; HS023602.
Citation: Singh H, Zwaan L .
Annals for hospitalists inpatient notes - Reducing diagnostic error-a new horizon of opportunities for hospital medicine.
Ann Intern Med 2016 Oct 18;165(8):HO2-HO4. doi: 10.7326/m16-2042.
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Keywords: Medical Errors, Diagnostic Safety and Quality, Patient Safety, Health Information Technology (HIT), Inpatient Care
Her QL, Amato MG, Seger DL
The frequency of inappropriate nonformulary medication alert overrides in the inpatient setting.
The purpose of this study was to quantify the frequency of inappropriate nonformulary medication (NFM) alert overrides in the inpatient setting and provide insight on how the design of formulary alerts could be improved. The study found that approximately 1 in 5 NFM alert overrides are overridden inappropriately.
AHRQ-funded; HS021094.
Citation: Her QL, Amato MG, Seger DL .
The frequency of inappropriate nonformulary medication alert overrides in the inpatient setting.
J Am Med Inform Assoc 2016 Sep;23(5):924-33. doi: 10.1093/jamia/ocv181..
Keywords: Clinical Decision Support (CDS), Health Information Technology (HIT), Inpatient Care, Medication, Patient Safety
Masterson Creber R, Prey J, Ryan B
Engaging hospitalized patients in clinical care: study protocol for a pragmatic randomized controlled trial.
The purpose of this paper is to describe the protocol for a study to assess how patients' information needs during hospitalization can be addressed with health information technologies using a personalized inpatient portal. The study is designed to test whether the portal will improve patient engagement.
AHRQ-funded; HS021816.
Citation: Masterson Creber R, Prey J, Ryan B .
Engaging hospitalized patients in clinical care: study protocol for a pragmatic randomized controlled trial.
Contemp Clin Trials 2016 Mar;47:165-71. doi: 10.1016/j.cct.2016.01.005.
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Keywords: Health Information Technology (HIT), Hospitalization, Inpatient Care, Patient and Family Engagement, Web-Based
Michelson KA, Ho T, Pelletier A
A mobile, collaborative, real time task list for inpatient environments.
The researchers created a mobile, collaborative, real-time task list application on the iOS platform. They then described their experience designing and piloting the application with an inpatient pediatric ward team at an academic pediatric hospital. They found that physicians preferred the immediacy and familiarity of paper, and did not experience an efficiency benefit when using the electronic tasklist.
AHRQ-funded; HS000063.
Citation: Michelson KA, Ho T, Pelletier A .
A mobile, collaborative, real time task list for inpatient environments.
Appl Clin Inform 2015 Nov 18;6(4):677-83. doi: 10.4338/aci-2015-05-cr-0050.
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Keywords: Care Management, Communication, Health Information Technology (HIT), Inpatient Care, Health Information Technology (HIT)