Analysis of Electronic Health Record Use and Clinical Productivity and Their Association With Physician Turnover
Melnick ER, Fong A, Nath B, Williams B, Ratwani RM, Goldstein R, O’Connell R, Sinsky CA, Marchalik D, Mete M. Analysis of Electronic Health Record Use and Clinical Productivity and Their Association With Physician Turnover. JAMA Network Open 2021, 4: e2128790. PMID: 34636911, PMCID: PMC8511970, DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.28790.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsElectronic health recordsPhysician turnoverRetrospective cohort studyElectronic health record usePractice networkPhysician productivityWarrants further investigationCohort studyEHR timeAge 45Care teamPhysician departurePhysician ordersMAIN OUTCOMEHigh riskPatient timeAmbulatory physiciansPatient volumeUnique physiciansRecord useEHR useHealth care organizationsPhysiciansHealth recordsClinical timeThe association between perceived electronic health record usability and professional burnout among US nurses
Melnick ER, West CP, Nath B, Cipriano PF, Peterson C, Satele DV, Shanafelt T, Dyrbye LN. The association between perceived electronic health record usability and professional burnout among US nurses. Journal Of The American Medical Informatics Association 2021, 28: 1632-1641. PMID: 33871018, PMCID: PMC8324227, DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocab059.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsBurnout, ProfessionalChildCross-Sectional StudiesElectronic Health RecordsHumansNursesSurveys and QuestionnairesConceptsElectronic health record usabilityUS nursesDose-response relationshipEHR usabilityCross-sectional surveyMultivariable analysisOdds of burnoutLower oddsNursing experiencePractice settingsCurrent EHRsNursesMaslach Burnout InventoryMean hoursProfessional burnoutScoresSUS scoreRandom sampleTechnology usabilityBurnout InventoryOddsStandardized metricsRelationship statusAssociationSystem Usability Scale