Medicine & Health Sciences

SAFER Electronic Health Records
Safety Assurance Factors for EHR Resilience

Editors: Dean F. Sittig, PhD
Hardeep Singh, MD, MPH

SAFER Electronic Health Records

Published. Available now.
Pub Date: April 2015
Hardback Price: see ordering info
Hard ISBN: 9781771881173
Paperback ISBN: 978-1-77463-539-1
E-Book ISBN: 9781498726382
Pages: 506 pp with index
Binding Type: hardbound / ebook / paperback

Now Available in Paperback


This important volume provides a one-stop resource on the SAFER Guides along with the guides themselves and information on their use, development, and evaluation. The Safety Assurance Factors for EHR Resilience (SAFER) guides, developed by the editors of this book, identify recommended practices to optimize the safety and safe use of electronic health records (EHRs). These guides are designed to help organizations self-assess the safety and effectiveness of their EHR implementations, identify specific areas of vulnerability, and change their cultures and practices to mitigate risks.

This book provides EHR designers, developers, implementers, users, and policymakers with the requisite historical context, clinical informatics knowledge, and real-world, practical guidance to enable them to utilize the SAFER Guides to proactively assess the safety and effectiveness of their electronic health records EHR implementations.

The first five chapters are designed to provide readers with the conceptual knowledge required to understand why and how the guides were developed. The next nine chapters focus on the underlying informatics concepts, key research activities, and methods used to develop each of the guides. Each of these chapters concludes with a copy of the guide itself. The final chapter provides a vision for the future and the the work required to ensure that future generations of EHRs are designed, developed, implemented, and used to improve the overall safety of the EHR-enabled healthcare system.

The book:
  • describes the context of EHR safety and the need for risk assessment
  • presents an analysis of EHR safety
  • provide guidelines for safe and effective EHR use
  • covers the conceptual foundation of SAFER Guides
  • relates how SAFER Guides were developed
  • presents an overview of SAFER Guides
  • shows how to mitigate unintentional EHR downtimes, such as power outages
  • describes how to safely configure and maintain EHRs and system-to-system interfaces
  • describes how to assess patient identification related practices
  • presents how to assess diagnostic test result reporting and follow-up
  • how to create an oversight infrastructure for EHR Safety
Taken together, the information provided in this book should help any organization, whether large or small, to implement their EHR program and to improve the safety and effectiveness of their existing EHR-enabled healthcare systems.

This volume will be extremely valuable to small, ambulatory physician practices and larger outpatient settings as well as for hospitals and professors and instructors charged with teaching safe and effective implementation and use of EHRs. It will also be highly useful for health information technology professionals responsible for maintaining a safe and effective EHR and for clinical and administrative staff working in EHR-enabled healthcare systems.

CONTENTS:
Introduction
1. The Context of EHR Safety and the Need for Risk Assessment
Defining Health Information Technology-related Errors: New Developments Since To Err is Human
Dean F. Sittig and Hardeep Singh
Eight Rights of Safe Electronic Health Record Use
Dean F. Sittig and Hardeep Singh
Electronic Health Record–Related Safety Concerns: A Cross-Sectional Survey
Shailaja Menon, Hardeep Singh, Ashley N.D. Meyer, Elisabeth Belmont, and Dean F. Sittig
2. Analysis of EHR Safety
Review of Reported Clinical Information System Adverse Events in US Food and Drug Administration Databases
Risa B. Myers, Stephen L. Jones, and Dean F. Sittig
Exploring the Sociotechnical Intersection of Patient Safety and Electronic Health Record Implementation
Derek W. Meeks, Amirhossein Takian, Dean F. Sittig, Hardeep Singh, and Nick Barber
An Analysis of Electronic Health Record-Related Patient Safety Concerns
Derek W. Meeks, Michael W. Smith, Lesley Taylor, Dean F. Sittig, Jeanie Scott, and Hardeep Singh
3. User Context of Safe and Effective EHR Use
Rights and Responsibilities of Electronic Health Record Users
Dean F. Sittig and Hardeep Singh
Rights and Responsibilities of EHR Users Caring for Children
Dean F. Sittig, Hardeep Singh, and Christopher A. Longhurst
4. Conceptual Foundation of SAFER Guides
A New Socio-technical Model for Studying Health Information Technology in Complex Adaptive Healthcare Systems
Dean F. Sittig and Hardeep Singh
Electronic Health Records and National Patient Safety Goals
Dean F. Sittig and Hardeep Singh
5. SAFER Guide Development Methods
Safety Assurance Factors for Electronic Health Record Resilience (SAFER): Study Protocol
Hardeep Singh, Joan S. Ash, and Dean F. Sittig
6. Overview of SAFER Guides
The SAFER Guides: Empowering Organizations to Improve the Safety and Effectiveness of Electronic Health Records
Dean F. Sittig, Joan S. Ash, and Hardeep Singh
A Red-Flag Based Approach to Risk Management of EHR-Related Safety Concerns
Dean F. Sittig and Hardeep Singh
High Priority Practices for EHR Safety
SAFER Guides
7. Mitigating EHR Downtimes
Contingency Planning for Electronic Health Record-based Care Continuity: A Survey of Recommended Practices
Dean F. Sittig, Daniel Gonzalez, and Hardeep Singh
Downtime
SAFER Guides
8. Safely Configuring and Maintaining EHRs and System-to-System Interfaces
Field Study of the System Interfaces SAFER Guide
Rodney E. Howell, Hardeep Singh, and Dean F. Sittig
System-System Interfaces
SAFER Guides
Hardware/Software Configuration
SAFER Guides
9. Assessment of Patient Identification Related Practices
Matching Identifiers in Electronic Health Records: Implications for Duplicate Records and Patient Safety
Allison B. McCoy, Adam Wright, Michael G. Kahn, Jason S. Shapiro, Elmer V. Bernstam, and Dean F. Sittig
SAFER Self-Assessment: Patient Identification
SAFER Guides
10. Assessment of Computer-based Provider Order Entry with Clinical Decision Support
Development and Field Testing of a Self-Assessment Guide for Computer-Based Provider Order Entry
Carl V. Vartian, Hardeep Singh, Elise Russo, and Dean F. Sittig
Computerized Provider Order Entry with Clinical Decision Support
SAFER Guides
11. Assessment of Diagnostic Test Result Reporting and Follow-Up
Improving Follow-Up of Abnormal Cancer Screens Using Electronic Health Records: Trust but Verify Test Result Communication
Hardeep Singh, Lindsey Wilson, Laura A Petersen, Mona K Sawhney, Brian Reis, Donna Espadas and Dean F Sittig
Improving Test Result Follow-up through Electronic Health Records Requires More than Just an Alert
Dean F. Sittig and Hardeep Singh
Ten Strategies to Improve Management of Abnormal Test Result Alerts in the Electronic Health Record
Hardeep Singh, Lindsey Wilson, Brian Reis, Mona K. Sawhney, Donna Espadas, and Dean F. Sittig
SAFER Self-Assessment Guide: Test Result Reporting and Follow-up
SAFER Guides
12. Assessment of Clinician-to-Clinician E-Communication
Improving the Effectiveness of Electronic Health Record-Based Referral Processes
Adol Esquivel, Dean F. Sittig, Daniel R. Murphy, and Hardeep Singh
SAFER Self-Assessment Guide: Clinician Communication
SAFER Guides
13. Assessment of Handheld Computing Devices
Sociotechnical Evaluation of the Safety and Effectiveness of Point-of-Care Mobile Computing Devices: A Case Study Conducted in India
Dean F. Sittig, Kanav Kahol, and Hardeep Singh
14. Increasing Resilience in an EHR-Enabled Healthcare Organization
Resilient Practices in Maintaining Safety of Health Information Technologies
Michael W. Smith, Joan S. Ash, Dean F. Sittig, and Hardeep Singh
SAFER Self-Assessment Guide: Organizational Activities and Responsibilities for Electronic Health Record (EHR) Safety
SAFER Guides
15. Creating an Oversight Infrastructure for EHR Safety
Creating an Oversight Infrastructure for Electronic Health Record-Related Patient Safety Hazards
Hardeep Singh, David C. Classen, and Dean F. Sittig
Patient Safety Goals for the Proposed Federal Health Information Technology Safety Center
Dean F. Sittig, David C. Classen, and Hardeep Singh
Index


About the Authors / Editors:
Editors: Dean F. Sittig, PhD
Professor, School of Biomedical Informatics, University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston, Texas

Dean F. Sittig, PhD, is a Professor at the School of Biomedical Informatics at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston and a member of the UT Houston-Memorial Hermann Center for Healthcare Quality and Safety, Houston, Texas.. Dr. Sittig’s research interests center on the design, development, implementation, and evaluation of all aspects of clinical information systems. In addition to Dr. Sittig’s work on measuring the impact of clinical information systems on a large scale, he is working to improve our understanding of both the factors that lead to success, as well as the unintended consequences associated with computer-based clinical decision support and provider order entry systems. He is the co-author of three award-winning books from the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society.

Hardeep Singh, MD, MPH
Chief, Health Policy, Quality & Informatics Program, Houston Veterans Affairs Center for Innovations in Quality, Effectiveness and Safety, Houston, Texas, and Associate Professor of Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas

Hardeep Singh, MD, MPH, is Chief of the Health Policy, Quality & Informatics program at the Houston Veterans Affairs Center for Innovations in Quality, Effectiveness and Safety, Houston, Texas, and Associate Professor of Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas. He is a practicing internist and conducts multidisciplinary research on patient safety improvement in electronic health record-based clinical settings. Dr. Singh received the Academy-Health 2012 Alice S. Hersh New Investigator Award for high-impact research of international significance. In April 2014, he received the prestigious Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers from President Obama for his pioneering work in the field of diagnostic errors and patient safety improvement.




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