The potential for health information technology (IT) to improve health care delivery has been appreciated for decades, but "digitizing" health care can also introduce new risks and even harm. As the use of health IT has grown, these risks have become more apparent. The authors of this report evaluated the efforts of 11 hospitals and ambulatory practices to use an improvement strategy and tools developed to promote safe use of health IT and to diagnose, monitor, and mitigate health IT–related safety risks. Through interviews, the authors discovered that some health care organizations (especially hospitals) with expertise in process improvement were able to identify and begin to mitigate health safety risks, but in most others, awareness of these risks was limited (especially in ambulatory practices). The authors concluded that better tools like the recently released Safety Assurance Factors for EHR Resilience (SAFER) Guides are needed to help organizations optimize the safe use of health IT. However, health care organizations will require a better understanding of the safety risks posed by electronic health record (EHR) use to take full advantage of the SAFER Guides. There may also be a need for additional tools and metrics (and further usability studies of existing tools and metrics) to better support the needs of health care organizations as they increasingly rely on health IT to improve the quality and safety of patient care.
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Table of Contents
Chapter One
Background
Chapter Two
Implementation of Health IT Safety Risk Projects
Chapter Three
Evaluation
Chapter Four
Results
Chapter Five
Lessons from the Pilot Project
Chapter Six
Discussion
Appendix A
ECRI Institute PSO Adverse Event Analysis
Research conducted by
This report was sponsored by the U.S. Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology, and was conducted within RAND Health, a division of the RAND Corporation.
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