학술논문

An Automated System for Physician Trainee Procedure Logging via Electronic Health Records.
Document Type
article
Source
JAMA Network Open. 7(1)
Subject
Health Services and Systems
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Health Sciences
Generic health relevance
Humans
Electronic Health Records
Reproducibility of Results
Education
Medical
Graduate
Emergency Medicine
Physicians
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Health sciences
Language
Abstract
ImportanceProcedural proficiency is a core competency for graduate medical education; however, procedural reporting often relies on manual workflows that are duplicative and generate data whose validity and accuracy are difficult to assess. Failure to accurately gather these data can impede learner progression, delay procedures, and negatively impact patient safety.ObjectiveTo examine accuracy and procedure logging completeness of a system that extracts procedural data from an electronic health record system and uploads these data securely to an application used by many residency programs for accreditation.Design, setting, and participantsThis quality improvement study of all emergency medicine resident physicians at University of California, San Diego Health was performed from May 23, 2023, to June 25, 2023.ExposuresAutomated system for procedure data extraction and upload to a residency management software application.Main outcomes and measuresThe number of procedures captured by the automated system when running silently compared with manually logged procedures in the same timeframe, as well as accuracy of the data upload.ResultsForty-seven residents participated in the initial silent assessment of the extraction component of the system. During a 1-year period (May 23, 2022, to May 7, 2023), 4291 procedures were manually logged by residents, compared with 7617 procedures captured by the automated system during the same period, representing a 78% increase. During assessment of the upload component of the system (May 8, 2023, to June 25, 2023), a total of 1353 procedures and patient encounters were evaluated, with the system operating with a sensitivity of 97.4%, specificity of 100%, and overall accuracy of 99.5%.Conclusions and relevanceIn this quality improvement study of emergency medicine resident physicians, an automated system demonstrated that reliance on self-reported procedure logging resulted in significant procedural underreporting compared with the use of data obtained at the point of performance. Additionally, this system afforded a degree of reliability and validity heretofore absent from the usual after-the-fact procedure logging workflows while using a novel application programming interface-based approach. To our knowledge, this system constitutes the first generalizable implementation of an automated solution to a problem that has existed in graduate medical education for decades.