Implementation and adoption of nationwide electronic health records in secondary care in England: qualitative analysis of interim results from a prospective national evaluation
Open Access
- 1 September 2010
- Vol. 341 (sep01 3), c4564
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.c4564
Abstract
Objectives To describe and evaluate the implementation and adoption of detailed electronic health records in secondary care in England and thereby provide early feedback for the ongoing local and national rollout of the NHS Care Records Service. Design A mixed methods, longitudinal, multisite, socio-technical case study. Setting Five NHS acute hospital and mental health trusts that have been the focus of early implementation efforts and at which interim data collection and analysis are complete. Data sources and analysis Dataset for the evaluation consists of semi-structured interviews, documents and field notes, observations, and quantitative data. Qualitative data were analysed thematically with a socio-technical coding matrix, combined with additional themes that emerged from the data. Main results Hospital electronic health record applications are being developed and implemented far more slowly than was originally envisioned; the top-down, standardised approach has needed to evolve to admit more variation and greater local choice, which hospital trusts want in order to support local activity. Despite considerable delays and frustrations, support for electronic health records remains strong, including from NHS clinicians. Political and financial factors are now perceived to threaten nationwide implementation of electronic health records. Interviewees identified a range of consequences of long term, centrally negotiated contracts to deliver the NHS Care Records Service in secondary care, particularly as NHS trusts themselves are not party to these contracts. These include convoluted communication channels between different stakeholders, unrealistic deployment timelines, delays, and applications that could not quickly respond to changing national and local NHS priorities. Our data suggest support for a “middle-out” approach to implementing hospital electronic health records, combining government direction with increased local autonomy, and for restricting detailed electronic health record sharing to local health communities. Conclusions Experiences from the early implementation sites, which have received considerable attention, financial investment and support, indicate that delivering improved healthcare through nationwide electronic health records will be a long, complex, and iterative process requiring flexibility and local adaptability both with respect to the systems and the implementation strategy. The more tailored, responsive approach that is emerging is becoming better aligned with NHS organisations’ perceived needs and is, if pursued, likely to deliver clinically useful electronic health record systems.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Can Electronic Clinical Documentation Help Prevent Diagnostic Errors?New England Journal of Medicine, 2010
- Evaluating eHealth Interventions: The Need for Continuous Systemic EvaluationPLoS Medicine, 2009
- Building a National Health IT System from the Middle OutJournal of the American Medical Informatics Association, 2009
- Use of Electronic Health Records in U.S. HospitalsNew England Journal of Medicine, 2009
- Stimulating the Adoption of Health Information TechnologyNew England Journal of Medicine, 2009
- Introduction of shared electronic records: multi-site case study using diffusion of innovation theoryBMJ, 2008
- Proposed changes for nurse education in England (UK) as a result of the Darzi report (DoH, 2008a) Health Quality Care for All – NHS next stage review final report: Some initial observationsNurse Education in Practice, 2008
- Implementing the NHS information technology programme: qualitative study of progress in acute trustsBMJ, 2007
- Four rules for the reinvention of health careBMJ, 2004
- Experience with a structure, process and outcome framework for evaluating an information systemOmega, 1994