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Overview. Rational for our 2002 Iowa surveyResults for Iowa's urban and rural hospitalsCorrelates of IT capacityDifferences between Iowa's hospitals and hospitals in Quebec and OntarioPlans for new survey. Rational for 2002 Iowa Survey. We were funded to assess the impact of the Leapfrog Group p
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1. Information Technology Capacity in Iowa’s Hospitals Marcia M. Ward, Ph.D.
Dept of Health Management & Policy
University of Iowa
Presented to Iowa HIMSS – April 5, 2005
2. Overview Rational for our 2002 Iowa survey
Results for Iowa’s urban and rural hospitals
Correlates of IT capacity
Differences between Iowa’s hospitals and hospitals in Quebec and Ontario
Plans for new survey
3. Rational for 2002 Iowa Survey We were funded to assess the impact of the Leapfrog Group patient safety initiatives in Iowa hospitals
Assessment of impact of CPOE required estimates of the cost of implementing CPOE in Iowa’s urban and rural hospitals
Cost estimates were affected by the existing IT capacity
4. Source for Survey Paré G. & Sicotte C. Information technology sophistication in health care: An instrument validation study among Canadian hospitals. International Journal of Medical Informatics, 63: 205-223, 2001
5. 2002 Hospital IT Survey
6. Disclaimers The survey content was developed for use in Canadian hospitals and may not apply to Iowa hospitals
Our survey was conducted in fall 2002
The survey purpose was to provide input for cost estimates for CPOE
8. Survey Responses Survey was completed by 74 Iowa hospitals:
13 urban hospitals
5 rural referral hospitals
28 rural PPS hospitals
28 critical access hospitals
9. Participating Urban and Rural Referral Hospitals Alegent Health Mercy
Broadlawns
Covenant
Genesis
Iowa Methodist
Jennie Edmundson
Marshalltown
Mary Greeley
Mercy Hospital – Iowa City
Mercy – Cedar Rapids
Mercy – Des Moines
Mercy – Dubuque
Mercy – North Iowa
Mercy – Sioux City
Ottumwa
St Luke’s
Trinity Regional
UIHC
10. Who Filled Out the Survey? Job title
50% completed by CIO or IT director in urban
30% completed by IT director in rural
Years of IT experience
12.3 years for urban hospital respondents
5.1 years for rural hospital respondents
Years employed in current hospital
6.7 years for urban hospital respondents
7.1 years for rural hospital respondents
11. Questions on Clinical IT Capacity Respondents were asked to check a box indicating whether each of 56 clinical processes were computerized
Respondents were asked whether each of 41 clinical technologies were used
Respondents were asked to indicate the extent of integration among 16 clinical systems
12. Clinical Area Included in Survey Questions were divided into 8 areas:
Patient management
Physician
Nurse
ER
OR
Laboratory
Radiology
Pharmacy
13. Comparison of Results in Iowa Urban and Rural Hospitals Results are shown separately for Iowa’s urban and rural hospitals
“Urban” refers to the average of 13 urban and 5 rural referral hospitals; average levels are shown in blue bars
“Rural” refers to the average of 28 rural PPS hospitals and 28 critical access hospitals; average levels are shown in red bars
14. Patient Management Processes that Are Computerized
15. Patient Management Technologies that Are Used
16. Physician Documents or Activities that Are Computerized
17. Physician Technologies that Are Used
18. Nursing Processes or Documents that Are Computerized
19. Nursing Technologies that Are Used
20. ER Processes that Are Computerized
21. ER Technologies that Are Used
22. OR Processes that Are Computerized
23. OR Technologies that Are Used
24. Laboratory Processes that Are Computerized
25. Laboratory Technologies that Are Used
26. Radiology Processes that Are Computerized
27. Radiology Technologies that Are Used
28. Pharmacy Processes that Are Computerized
29. Pharmacy Technologies that Are Used
30. Clinical Processes that Are Computerized
31. Technologies that Are Used
32. Most Frequent Computerized Processes Some processes were computerized in over 80% of urban and rural hospitals.
These are probably “basic” processes that are computerized in almost all hospitals:
Inpatient admissions
Outpatient admissions
Dictation systems for physicians’ notes
PCs at nursing stations
Registration of patients in radiology
Medication purchasing
Telemedicine for diagnosis in radiology (may pertain to Iowa hospitals but not to other states)
33. Least Frequent Computerized Processes Some processes were computerized in less than 20% of urban and rural hospitals
These are probably “stretch” processes that are computerized in only a few hospitals:
Patient waitlist management
Staff workload management
OR – anesthetic notes recording
OR – touch screen systems for notes transcription
34. Largest Urban-Rural Differences in Processes and Technologies Computerized processes that showed the largest differences (>50%) between urban and rural hospitals were:
Scheduling systems for outpatients
Physician connection to external databases
OR – materials (tools) management
OR – operations booking
OR – smart scheduling of operations
Pharmacy – historical information storing
Pharmacy – IV admixtures management
35. Largest Urban-Rural Differences in Processes and Technologies – cont’ Computerized processes that showed the largest differences (>50%) between urban and rural hospitals were:
Laboratory – patient registration and admission
Laboratory – recurring test management
Laboratory – blood bank management
Laboratory – specimen pick-up rounds scheduling
Laboratory – specimen archiving
Radiology – results capturing and validation
Radiology – electronic requisitions for tests
Radiology – access to images via workstations/web browser
Radiology – digital (filmless) radiologic images
Radiology – bar coding (for envelopes management, films, etc.)
36. Correlates of Clinical IT Capacity Both the availability of computerized clinical systems and the use of computerized technology were significantly correlated (>.50) with the following variables:
Hospital category (urban, rural referral, rural PPS, critical access hospital)
Number of hospital beds
Hospital total FTE personnel
Net patient revenue
Number of IT personnel
37. Comparison of Iowa and Canada The original paper by Pare & Sicotte (2001) reported data from 186 hospitals in Ontario and Quebec
We computed differences between the values reported in Canada and the survey responses for Iowa hospitals
The following four tables show the items with the greatest differences
38. Computerized IT Processes
39. Computerized IT Processes
40. Use Computerized Technologies
41. Use Computerized Technologies
42. Summary of Iowa-Canada Differences Hospitals in Iowa appear to have fewer computerized processes than hospitals in Canada
Hospitals in Iowa appear to use more computerized technologies than hospitals in Canada
43. Need for a New Survey We are funded by AHRQ on a 3-year grant to:
Examine the IT capacity of Iowa’s rural hospitals
Identify patient safety and healthcare quality issues in Iowa’s rural hospitals
Develop toolkits to help Iowa’s rural hospitals make informed IT purchases that will be affordable and address needs
Plans for new survey
45. Plans for New Survey Primary goal of a new survey is to quantify IT capacity in Iowa’s hospitals
Getting respondents from all of Iowa’s hospitals is critical, so survey must be brief and easy to complete
We are proposing that the new survey essentially consist of an inventory of clinical IT systems
46. Clinical Systems - Examples Patient Registration
Patient Scheduling
Patient Billing
Barcoding
Electronic health record (EHR)
CPOE
47. Questions Asked for Current Systems Current Systems
? None
? Installing, not yet operational
? Currently operational
Product or vendor name (if applicable)
48. Questions Asked for Planned Systems Planned systems
? No Plans
? Planning – no budget commitments
? Budgeted and reviewing vendors
? Budgeted install – vendor selected
? Budgeted upgrade with present vendor
Product or vendor name (if applicable)
49. Next Steps We hope to finalize the “Inventory” survey
Once we get surveys back, we will follow-up with respondents who have specific clinical IT systems, such as:
Electronic health records
Pharmacy – medication dispensing (Pyxis)
Picture archival (PACs)
50. Request for Your Feedback Will this survey design get us the information we need on what clinical systems Iowa’s hospitals have?
Will informed staff in Iowa’s hospitals complete the survey as designed?
Thank you!