1. Electronic Medical Record Use Among US Occupational Medicine Physicians A National Survey.
- Author
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Soteriades, Elpidoforos S., Talias, Michael A., Harmon, Kirk T., Schumann, Steven C., and Kales, Stefanos N.
- Subjects
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ELECTRONIC health records , *CHI-squared test , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *CUSTOMER satisfaction , *EPIDEMIOLOGY , *OCCUPATIONAL medicine , *PATIENT safety , *POPULATION geography , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *T-test (Statistics) , *DATA analysis , *DISEASE prevalence , *DATA analysis software , *PHYSICIANS' attitudes , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Objective: To examine the use of electronic medical records (EMRs) among US occupational medicine physicians (OMPs). Methods: An electronic- and paper-based survey was conducted among OMPs using an anonymous self- administered questionnaire. Results: The OMPs reported using an EMR for billing purposes only (14.6%), clinical purposes only (27.8%), or both (39.3%) with the total EMR use of 81.7%. About 60% were satisfied with their EMRs, and 64% to 66% believed that EMRs improve safety and quality of medical care. Among OMPs not using EMR, 17% reported that they were likely to adopt an EMR in the year after the survey, whereas 47% were very unlikely to do so. Conclusions: Occupational physicians' use of EMRs was relatively high. They also seemed to be satisfied with their EMRs and believed that EMRs improve both safety and quality of clinical care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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