Our longitudinal study examines the changing roles of health care professionals (physicians, nurses, medical assistants, practice managers, and secretaries) before and after an EHR implementation in a large, multi-location group practice. We take a social informatics perspective and focus on the changing social identities of health care professionals as they adapt to their EHR-enabled roles. A year after go-live, a few professionals were still in reactive mode, trying to cope with the new system, but many others were actively shaping the technology and their roles in a variety of ways. A few went beyond shaping to find ways to provide additional value to themselves and to patients in ways that became possible only because of the EHR. In thi...
Moving an organization from a paper-based, heavily manual environment to an electronic, technology-s...
The United States of America is known for the rising costs of its healthcare and declining quality o...
Electronic health records (EHRs) are described as one strategy to: 1) improve health care quality; 2...
Adopting new technologies, such as electronic patient records (EPR) systems, is essential for improv...
One significant feature of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act passed in 2009 is the mandate ...
This article considers changes in healthcare professional work afforded by technology. It uses the s...
Electronic health records (EHR) facilitate integration of patient health history for planning safe a...
ObjectiveExamine how the Electronic Health Record (EHR) and its related systems support or inhibit p...
Implementing an Electronic Health Record (EHR) in a healthcare organisation and improving the adopti...
Abstract— Electronic health records (EHRs) offer many potential opportunities for patients, payers, ...
Among the many transformation in healthcare systems a particular role is played by technological inn...
Electronic Health Records (EHR) have become standard practice and have altered the way physicians wo...
Electronic health records (EHRs) store health-related patient information in an electron...
Objective To study how social interactions influence physician adoption of an electronic health reco...
The stability of physicians’ authority over patients despite decades of changes in medicine conflict...
Moving an organization from a paper-based, heavily manual environment to an electronic, technology-s...
The United States of America is known for the rising costs of its healthcare and declining quality o...
Electronic health records (EHRs) are described as one strategy to: 1) improve health care quality; 2...
Adopting new technologies, such as electronic patient records (EPR) systems, is essential for improv...
One significant feature of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act passed in 2009 is the mandate ...
This article considers changes in healthcare professional work afforded by technology. It uses the s...
Electronic health records (EHR) facilitate integration of patient health history for planning safe a...
ObjectiveExamine how the Electronic Health Record (EHR) and its related systems support or inhibit p...
Implementing an Electronic Health Record (EHR) in a healthcare organisation and improving the adopti...
Abstract— Electronic health records (EHRs) offer many potential opportunities for patients, payers, ...
Among the many transformation in healthcare systems a particular role is played by technological inn...
Electronic Health Records (EHR) have become standard practice and have altered the way physicians wo...
Electronic health records (EHRs) store health-related patient information in an electron...
Objective To study how social interactions influence physician adoption of an electronic health reco...
The stability of physicians’ authority over patients despite decades of changes in medicine conflict...
Moving an organization from a paper-based, heavily manual environment to an electronic, technology-s...
The United States of America is known for the rising costs of its healthcare and declining quality o...
Electronic health records (EHRs) are described as one strategy to: 1) improve health care quality; 2...