Differences between the single payer healthcare system in Canada and the multiple payers in the U.S. have been cited as the cause of the gap between patient outcomes in the two countries, but it also could account for differences in physicians opinions of electronic health records.
A study by Deloitte in the U.S. released this week found the majority of doctors surveyed hold relatively negative perspectives on some aspects of EHRs, about the same since the same survey was done two years ago. Three out of four American physicians believe that EHRs increase practice costs, outweighing any efficiency savings, and seven out of 10 physicians think that EHRs reduce their productivity. Moreover, physicians are less likely to think that EHR capabilities support clinical outcomes than they did in the 2014 survey.
There isn’t a directly comparable survey in Canada. However, in January Canada Health Infoway approvingly cited a 2015 international study done by the Commonwealth Fund of primary care doctors findings in 10 countries, including 2,284 Canadian physicians. Infoway is an agency that helps provincial health departments spread digital technologies including electronic health records and electronic medical records. Sometimes EHR and EMR are used interchangeably.
The Commonwealth Fund report notes that EMR use among Canadian primary care physicians tripled in the past nine years.
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Most provinces saw growth in EMR use since the previous survey in 2012, says the report. Alberta, British Columbia and Ontario continue to have the highest adoption rates in Canada. Quebec, Manitoba and Saskatchewan experienced the highest increases in EMR uptake by primary care physicians since 2012.
Physicians with EMRs reported the ability to better manage their patients’ care compared to physicians operating without an EMR:
- 79 per cent of physicians with EMRs said that they are able to generate a computerized list of patients by diagnosis compared to 20 per cent without an EMR
- 70 per cent could generate a list of all medications taken by an individual patient compared to 17 per cent without an EMR
- 62 per cent produce a list of patients overdue for tests or preventative care compared to those without an EMR at 11 per cent
Canadian primary care physicians using EMRs are more likely to use some functionalities that support patient care and less likely to use others, when compared to the 10 country average from the Commonwealth Fund survey. For instance, they were more likely to receive and review data on patients who received recommended preventive care, and more likely to receive reminders for guideline-based interventions and/or screening tests.
However, they were less likely than colleagues in other countries to receive alerts and reminders for potential problems with medication doses or interactions, track all laboratory tests ordered until results reach clinicians and send reminders to patients for regular preventive or follow-up care.
While U.S. physicians may believe EHRs increase their costs, few said they would stop using their current EHR system: Three out of five would keep the current EHR system they have and not replace it.
In the U.S. Deloitte survey most physicians also saw electronic health records are most useful for analytics and reporting capabilities compared to other attributes; this has also increased since the 2014 survey.
The survey also found that 62 per cent of physicians surveyed wanted their EHRs to be more interoperable, while 57 per cent wanted improved workflow and increased productivity.
Canada Health Infoway is a joint venture with most of the provinces and territories in Canada to encourage EMR use in community-based physicians’ offices. Many EMR systems are also connected to electronic health record systems outside doctors’ practices. It also provides certification services for vendors so EHR/EMR systems are interoperable.
Date: September 29, 2016