Assessing the Effect of Telemedicine on Physician EHR Work, Cognition, and Process Outcomes (ASPIRE)
- Funded by National Institutes of Health (NIH)
- Total publications:0 publications
Grant number: 5R01LM013778-03
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Key facts
Disease
COVID-19Start & end year
2021.02025.0Known Financial Commitments (USD)
$340,448Funder
National Institutes of Health (NIH)Principal Investigator
PROFESSOR JULIA ADLER-MILSTEINResearch Location
United States of AmericaLead Research Institution
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN FRANCISCOResearch Priority Alignment
N/A
Research Category
Secondary impacts of disease, response & control measures
Research Subcategory
Indirect health impacts
Special Interest Tags
N/A
Study Type
Clinical
Clinical Trial Details
Not applicable
Broad Policy Alignment
Pending
Age Group
Adults (18 and older)
Vulnerable Population
Unspecified
Occupations of Interest
Physicians
Abstract
PROJECT SUMMARY The Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic dramatically altered healthcare delivery in persistent ways. To adhere to the physical distancing guidelines and to provide continuity of patient care, organizations shifted the primary modality of ambulatory care to telemedicine-based virtual encounters. This transition has altered the structure, management, and delivery of patient care-with large potential changes to patient-provider communication and availability of clinical information. For example, during telemedicine encounters clinicians can no longer conduct physical exams or obtain vitals that inform clinical reasoning and decision making in routine ambulatory evaluation and management (E&M) encounters. In turn, these factors may contribute to clinical uncertainty, and thereby alter how the clinician leverages the electronic health record (EHR). They may need to engage in additional chart review to fill information gaps, enter patient-generated health data, or send more follow-up communications. One or more of these changes serves to intensify EHR-based cognitive load as EHR activities and activity switching increase, both at the encounter level and cumulatively over the course of a workday. In turn, greater EHR-based cognitive load could contribute to suboptimal clinical decisions (e.g., more diagnostic tests or referrals) and more errors (e.g., wrong-patient orders). In the proposed Assessing the Effect of Telemedicine on Physician EHR Work, Cognition, and Process Outcomes (ASPIRE) project, we investigate the primary hypothesis that ambulatory telemedicine encounters in the COVID context are associated with increased EHR-based cognitive load among clinicians, and downstream suboptimal clinical decisions and more frequent errors. We leverage novel, EHR-based audit log data from a 3- year period spanning pre- and COVID-periods (March 2019 - February 2022) to directly measure clinicians' EHR activities in telemedicine and face-to-face encounters at two large academic medical centers (Washington University in St Louis and University of California, San Francisco). Using the COVID-19 pandemic as a natural experiment that dramatically increased ambulatory telemedicine encounters (more than 25-fold at the two health systems), our first aim will characterize the differences in EHR-based activities between face-to-face and telemedicine encounters. We will then construct a derivative measure of EHR activity switches (within and across encounters) as a proxy measure of cognitive load and evaluate the downstream impact of cognitive load on clinical decision making and wrong-patient errors. The findings from these aims will be leveraged in our final "design" aim that uses frontline clinician interviews and a national expert eDelphi process to elicit the EHR-based factors impacting telemedicine encounters and to identify potential design strategies to address associated challenges. The eDelphi process will focus on translating and prioritizing the identified design strategies into pragmatic goals to improve EHR support for telemedicine encounters.