Clinician Needs for Electronic Health Record Pediatric and Adolescent Weight Management Tools: A Mixed-Methods Study

被引:2
|
作者
Braddock, Amy S. [1 ]
Bosworth, K. Taylor [2 ]
Ghosh, Parijat [1 ]
Proffitt, Rachel [3 ]
Flowers, Lauren [2 ]
Montgomery, Emma [1 ]
Wilson, Gwendolyn [1 ]
Tosh, Aneesh K. [4 ]
Koopman, Richelle J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Missouri, Dept Family & Community Med, Columbia, MO USA
[2] Univ Missouri, Sch Med, Columbia, MO USA
[3] Univ Missouri, Sch Hlth Profess, Columbia, MO USA
[4] Univ Missouri, Dept Child Hlth, Columbia, MO USA
来源
APPLIED CLINICAL INFORMATICS | 2024年 / 15卷 / 02期
关键词
electronic health records; children; primary care; family medicine; workflow; health care provider; dashboard; mixed; PRIMARY-CARE; CHILDHOOD OBESITY; INFORMATION-TECHNOLOGY; ADOPTION;
D O I
10.1055/a-2283-9036
中图分类号
R-058 [];
学科分类号
摘要
Background Clinicians play an important role in addressing pediatric and adolescent obesity, but their effectiveness is restricted by time constraints, competing clinical demands, and the lack of effective electronic health record (EHR) tools. EHR tools are rarely developed with provider input. Objectives We conducted a mixed method study of clinicians who provide weight management care to children and adolescents to determine current barriers for effective care and explore the role of EHR weight management tools to overcome these barriers. Methods In this mixed-methods study, we conducted three 1-hour long virtual focus groups at one medium-sized academic health center in Missouri and analyzed the focus group scripts using thematic analysis. We sequentially conducted a descriptive statistical analysis of a survey emailed to pediatric and family medicine primary care clinicians ( n = 52) at two private and two academic health centers in Missouri. Results Surveyed clinicians reported that they effectively provided health behavior lifestyle counseling at well-child visits (mean of 60 on a scale of 1-100) and child obesity visits (63); however, most felt the current health care system (27) and EHR tools (41) do not adequately support pediatric weight management. Major themes from the clinician focus groups were that EHR weight management tools should display data in a way that (1) improves clinical efficiency, (2) supports patient-centered communication, (3) improves patient continuity between visits, and (4) reduces documentation burdens. An additional theme was (5) clinicians trust patient data entered in real time over patient recalled data. Conclusion Study participants report that the health care system status quo and currently available EHR tools do not sufficiently support clinicians working to manage pediatric or adolescent obesity and provide health behavior counseling. Clinician input in the development and testing of EHR weight management tools provides opportunities to address barriers, inform content, and improve efficiencies of EHR use.
引用
收藏
页码:368 / 377
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Difficulties and Needs of Adolescent Young Caregivers of Grandparents in Italy and Slovenia: A Concurrent Mixed-Methods Study
    Santini, Sara
    D'Amen, Barbara
    Socci, Marco
    Di Rosa, Mirko
    Hanson, Elizabeth
    Hlebec, Valentina
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH, 2022, 19 (05)
  • [22] Satisfaction and acceptability of paediatric weight management services amongst parents and carers: A mixed-methods study
    McMaster, Caitlin M.
    Cohen, Jennifer
    Alexander, Shirley
    Neal, Renee
    Gow, Megan L.
    Calleja, Elizabeth
    Signorelli, Christina
    Tan, Eng Joo
    Williams, Kathryn
    Sim, Kyra
    Leong, Gary
    Baur, Louise A.
    CLINICAL OBESITY, 2020, 10 (06)
  • [23] The acceptability, effectiveness, and impact of different models of care for pediatric weight management services: protocol for a concurrent mixed-methods study
    Jennifer Cohen
    Shirley Alexander
    Michelle Critekos
    Sarah P. Garnett
    Alison J. Hayes
    Tim Shaw
    Kyra A. Sim
    Louise A. Baur
    BMC Health Services Research, 18
  • [24] The Use of Electronic Health Record Tools to Improve Evidence-Based Treatment of Adolescent Depression in Primary Care
    Bruni, Teryn
    LaLonde, Leah
    Maragakis, Alexandros
    Lee, Joyce
    Caserta, Abigail
    Kilbourne, Amy M.
    Smith, Shawna
    Orringer, Kelly
    Quigley, Joanna
    McCaffery, Harlan
    Lancaster, Blake
    ACADEMIC PEDIATRICS, 2021, 21 (07) : 1195 - 1202
  • [25] How context affects electronic health record-based test result follow-up: a mixed-methods evaluation
    Menon, Shailaja
    Smith, Michael W.
    Sittig, Dean F.
    Petersen, Nancy J.
    Hysong, Sylvia J.
    Espadas, Donna
    Modi, Varsha
    Singh, Hardeep
    BMJ OPEN, 2014, 4 (11):
  • [26] The Patient-Held Active Record of Medication Status (PHARMS) study: a mixed-methods feasibility analysis
    Walsh, Elaine K.
    Sahm, Laura J.
    Bradley, Colin P.
    Dalton, Kieran
    O'Sullivan, Kathleen
    McCarthy, Stephen
    Connolly, Eimear
    Fitzgerald, Ciara
    Smithson, William H.
    Kerins, David
    Byrne, Derina
    Kearney, Patricia M.
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF GENERAL PRACTICE, 2019, 69 (682) : E345 - E355
  • [27] An Electronic Clinical Decision Support System for the Assessment and Management of Suicidality in Primary Care: Protocol for a Mixed-Methods Study
    Horrocks, Matthew
    Michail, Maria
    Aubeeluck, Aimee
    Wright, Nicola
    Morriss, Richard
    JMIR RESEARCH PROTOCOLS, 2018, 7 (12):
  • [28] A mixed-methods evaluation framework for electronic health records usability studies
    Khairat, Saif
    Coleman, Cameron
    Newlin, Thomas
    Rand, Victoria
    Ottmar, Paige
    Bice, Thomas
    Carson, Shannon S.
    JOURNAL OF BIOMEDICAL INFORMATICS, 2019, 94
  • [29] Characterizing and Visualizing Display and Task Fragmentation in the Electronic Health Record: Mixed Methods Design
    Senathirajah, Yalini
    Kaufman, David R.
    Cato, Kenrick D.
    Borycki, Elizabeth M.
    Fawcett, Jaime Allen
    Kushniruk, Andre W.
    JMIR HUMAN FACTORS, 2020, 7 (04):
  • [30] Is the Counterweight Program a feasible and acceptable option for structured weight management delivered by practice nurses in Australia? A mixed-methods study
    Gray, Jodi
    Hoon, Elizabeth A.
    Afzali, Hossein Haji Ali
    Spooner, Catherine
    Harris, Mark F.
    Karnon, Jonathan
    AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF PRIMARY HEALTH, 2017, 23 (04) : 348 - 363