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The impact of a physician-directed health information technology system on diabetes outcomes in primary care: a pre- and post-implementation study

Authors :
Joseph Siemienczuk
Ginger Pape
Jacquelyn S Hunt
Benjamin H. LeBlanc
William Gillanders
Yelena Rozenfeld
Kerry Bonin
Source :
Journal of Innovation in Health Informatics, Vol 17, Iss 3, Pp 165-174 (2009)
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT, 2009.

Abstract

Purpose To determine the impact of a physiciandirected, multifaceted health information technology (HIT) system on diabetes outcomes. Methods A pre/post-interventional study. Setting and participants The setting was Providence Primary Care Research Network in Oregon, with approximately 71 physicians caring for 117 369 patients in 13 clinic locations. The study covered Network patients with diabetes age 18 years and older. Intervention The study intervention included implementation of the CareManagerTM HIT system which augments an electronic medical record (EMR) by automating physician driven quality improvement interventions, including point-of-care decision support and care reminders, diabetes registry with care prompts, performance feedback with benchmarking and access to published evidence and patient educational materials. Measures The primary clinical measures included the change in mean value for low density lipoprotein (LDL) target Results A total of 6072 patients were identified at baseline, 70% of whom were continuously enrolled during the 24-month study. Significant improvements were observed in all diabetes related outcomes except mean HbA1c. LDL goal attainment improved from 32% to 56% (P=0.002), while mean LDL decreased by 13 mg/dL (0.33 mmol/l, P=0.002). BP goal attainment increased significantly from 30% to 52%, with significant decreases in both mean systolic and diastolic BP. The proportion of patients with an HbA1c below 7% was higher at the end of the study (P=0.008). Mean patient satisfaction remained high, with no significant difference between baseline and follow-up. Total Relative Value Units per patient per year significantly increased as a result of an increase in the number of visits in year one and the coding complexity throughout. Conclusion Implementation of a physician-directed, multifaceted HIT system in primary care was associated with significantly improved diabetes process and outcome measures.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20584563 and 20584555
Volume :
17
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Innovation in Health Informatics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c01b2dc265c55fa255026463c2165a31