EHR Documentation: The Hype and the Hope for Improving Nursing Satisfaction and Quality Outcomes

Nursing Administration Quarterly (NAQ)

Oct-Dec 2015;39(4):333-9

doi: 10.1097/NAQ.0000000000000132

The phenomenon of "data rich, information poor" in today's electronic health records (EHRs) is too often the reality for nursing. This article proposes the redesign of nursing documentation to leverage EHR data and clinical intelligence tools to support evidence-based, personalized nursing care across the continuum. The principles consider the need to optimize nurses' documentation efficiency while contributing to knowledge generation. The nursing process must be supported by EHRs through integration of best care practices: seamless workflows that display the right tools, evidence-based content, and information at the right time for optimal clinical decision making. Design of EHR documentation must attain a balance that ensures the capture of nursing's impact on safety, quality, highly reliable care, patient engagement, and satisfaction, yet minimizes "death by data entry." In 2014, a group of diverse informatics leaders from practice, academia, and the vendor community formed to address how best to transform electronic documentation to provide knowledge at the point of care and to deliver value to front line nurses and nurse leaders. As our health care system moves toward reimbursement on the basis of quality outcomes and prevention, the value of nursing data in this business proposition will become a key differentiator for health care organizations' economic success.

Authors
Ann OʼBrien, Charlotte Weaver, Theresa Tess Settergren, Mary L Hook, Catherine H Ivory

Keyword
EHR Documentation
Article
electronic health records
Nursing Value