“When somebody builds a better mousetrap, it should be freely shared so that all patients have the opportunity to benefit,” Dr. Frost said. “The pursuit of economic competitive advantage should not prevent us from collaborating and sharing new ideas that hopefully make the health system better.”
Kendall Rogers, MD, FACP, SFHM, chief of the division of hospital medicine at the University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center in Albuquerque, N.M., says part of that improvement in quality and patient safety will come via hospitalists pushing for improvements to health information technology (HIT), particularly to maximize computerized physician order entry (CPOE) and order sets. He empathizes with those who complain about the operability of existing systems but urges physicians to stop complaining and take action.
“We need to stop accepting what our existing limitations are, and we need to be the innovators,” he says. “Many of us aren’t even thinking about, ‘What are the products we need?’ We’re just reacting to the products we currently have and stating how they don’t meet our needs.”
He suggests people communally report safety or troubleshooting issues, in part via Hospital Medicine Exchange (HMX), an online community SHM launched last year to discuss HM issues (www.hmxchange.org). He also wants hospitalists to push HIT vendors to provide improved functionality, and for institutions to provide necessary training.
“We just need to be vocal,” says Dr. Rogers, chair of SHM’s IT Executive Committee. “I do believe this is all leading us to a good place, but there’s a dip down before we have a swing up.”
Frustration Surge
In the long run, hospitalist Anuj Mehta, MD, medical director of the adult hospitalist program at Nyack Hospital in New York, agrees with Dr. Rogers. But as a provider seeing patients day after day, he says it’s often easier to not engage HIT than it is to slog through it.
“We try to work around the system, and sometimes it’s a much longer workaround,” he says. “So what happens is loss of productivity, greater length of stay, poor patient satisfaction, more screen time, and less bedside time.”
Dr. Mehta says frustration is building as society—outside of medicine—moves rapidly through such technology as smartphones, tablets, and other intuitive devices that make actions easier. He notes that his toddler daughter could learn how to navigate an iPad in a fraction of the time it takes him to complete an HIT training course.
“You cannot have physicians going through learning for four hours, learning a system to do step one before step two before step three,” he laments. “It should flow naturally. I don’t think the IT people have realized that as of yet.”
Richard Quinn is a freelance writer in New Jersey.