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. 2017 Sep 22;17(1):138.
doi: 10.1186/s12911-017-0523-4.

The role and benefits of accessing primary care patient records during unscheduled care: a systematic review

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The role and benefits of accessing primary care patient records during unscheduled care: a systematic review

Tom Bowden et al. BMC Med Inform Decis Mak. .

Abstract

Background: The purpose of this study was to assess the impact of accessing primary care records on unscheduled care. Unscheduled care is typically delivered in hospital Emergency Departments. Studies published to December 2014 reporting on primary care record access during unscheduled care were retrieved.

Results: Twenty-two articles met inclusion criteria from a pool of 192. Many shared electronic health records (SEHRs) were large in scale, servicing many millions of patients. Reported utilization rates by clinicians was variable, with rates >20% amongst health management organizations but much lower in nation-scale systems. No study reported on clinical outcomes or patient safety, and no economic studies of SEHR access during unscheduled care were available. Design factors that may affect utilization included consent and access models, SEHR content, and system usability and reliability.

Conclusions: Despite their size and expense, SEHRs designed to support unscheduled care have been poorly evaluated, and it is not possible to draw conclusions about any likely benefits associated with their use. Heterogeneity across the systems and the populations they serve make generalization about system design or performance difficult. None of the reviewed studies used a theoretical model to guide evaluation. Value of Information models may be a useful theoretical approach to design evaluation metrics, facilitating comparison across systems in future studies. Well-designed SEHRs should in principle be capable of improving the efficiency, quality and safety of unscheduled care, but at present the evidence for such benefits is weak, largely because it has not been sought.

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Not Applicable.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

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Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Systematic review flow diagram for articles reporting on the use of primary care records to support unscheduled care
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
The information value chain provides a simple causal model connecting record system use and clinical outcomes. Each step is characterized by different measures, and is dependent on different elements of shared record system design and use (adapted from Coiera, 2015, Chapter 11)

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