Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Medical Informatics
Date Submitted: Oct 22, 2019
Date Accepted: Apr 10, 2020
The effect of embedding “smart” disease coding within routine workflow on electronic medical record disease recording: A prospective single arm trial.
ABSTRACT
Background:
EMR (electronic medical record) chronic disease measurement can help direct primary care prevention and treatment strategies and plan health services resource management. Incomplete data and poor consistency of coded disease values within EMR problem lists are widespread issues that limit primary and secondary uses of these data. These issues were shared by the McMaster University Sentinel and Information Network (MUSIC), a Primary Care Practice Based Research Network (PBRN), located in Hamilton, Ontario.
Objective:
We sought to develop and evaluate the effectiveness of new EMR interface tools aimed at improving the quantity and the consistency of disease codes recorded within the disease registry across the MUSIC PBRN.
Methods:
We used a single arm, prospective trial design with pre- and post-intervention data analysis to assess the effect of the intervention on disease recording volume and quality. The MUSIC Network holds data on over 75,080 patients, 37,212 currently rostered. Four MUSIC Network clinician champions were involved in gap analysis of the disease coding process and in the iterative design of new interface tools. We leveraged terminology standards and factored EMR workflow and usability into a new interface solution that aimed to optimize code selection volume and quality while minimizing physician time burden. The intervention was integrated as part of usual clinical workflow during routine billing activities.
Results:
After implementation of the new interface (Jun 25, 2017), we assessed the disease registry codes at 3 and 6 months (intervention period), to compare their volume and quality to pre-intervention levels (baseline period). 17,496 ICD9 code values were recorded in the disease registry during the 11.5 year (2006 to mid-2017) baseline period. A large gain in disease recording occurred in the intervention period (48.7% over baseline), resulting in a total of 26,774 codes. The coding rate increased by a factor of 11.2, averaging 1,419 codes codes/month over the baseline average rate of 127 codes/month. The proportion of preferred ICD9 codes increased by 17% in the intervention period (63% [11,007/17,496] vs 80% [7,417/9,278], χ2 = 819.4, P<.001). 45% of disease codes were entered by way of the new screen prompt tools with significant increases between quarters (Jul-Sep: 41% [2,507/6,140] vs Oct-Dec: 53% [1,671/3,148], χ2 = 126.2, P<.001).
Conclusions:
The introduction of clinician co-designed, workflow-embedded, disease coding tools is a very effective solution to the issues of poor disease coding and quality in EMRs. The substantial effectiveness in a routine care environment demonstrates usability, and the intervention detail described here should be generalizable to any setting. Significant improvements in problem list coding within primary care EMRs can be realized with minimal disruption to routine clinical workflow.
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