Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
517020 Journal of Biomedical Informatics 2016 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The first inventory of measures for the impact of health IT adoption is proposed.•We identified 79 outcome measures in the areas of quality, safety and productivity.•A taxonomy is developed to categorize the most commonly used outcome measures.•Context-domain information is provided to facilitate comparison of future studies.•Recommendations for future research on the impact of IT interventions are provided.

ObjectiveTo classify and characterize the variables commonly used to measure the impact of Information Technology (IT) adoption in health care, as well as settings and IT interventions tested, and to guide future research.Materials and methodsWe conducted a descriptive study screening a sample of 236 studies from a previous systematic review to identify outcome measures used and the availability of data to calculate these measures. We also developed a taxonomy of commonly used measures and explored setting characteristics and IT interventions.ResultsClinical decision support is the most common intervention tested, primarily in non-hospital-based clinics and large academic hospitals. We identified 15 taxa representing the 79 most commonly used measures. Quality of care was the most common category of these measurements with 62 instances, followed by productivity (11 instances) and patient safety (6 instances). Measures used varied according to type of setting, IT intervention and targeted population.DiscussionThis study provides an inventory and a taxonomy of commonly used measures that will help researchers select measures in future studies as well as identify gaps in their measurement approaches. The classification of the other protocol components such as settings and interventions will also help researchers identify underexplored areas of research on the impact of IT interventions in health care.ConclusionA more robust and standardized measurement system and more detailed descriptions of interventions and settings are necessary to enable comparison between studies and a better understanding of the impact of IT adoption in health care settings.

Graphical abstractFigure optionsDownload full-size imageDownload high-quality image (115 K)Download as PowerPoint slide

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Science Applications
Authors
, , , , , ,