Outcomes of an Advanced Epic Personalization Course on Clinician Efficiency through Use of Electronic Medical Records: Retrospective Study
Abstract BackgroundSince Singapore’s first migration to EpicEpic ObjectiveThe intent of the course is to improve clinician efficiency through customization and personalization of EpicEpic MethodsWe performed a retrospective analysis from July 2022 to Ja...
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Main Authors: | , , , , , |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
JMIR Publications
2025-06-01
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Series: | JMIR Formative Research |
Online Access: | https://formative.jmir.org/2025/1/e68491 |
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Summary: | Abstract
BackgroundSince Singapore’s first migration to EpicEpic
ObjectiveThe intent of the course is to improve clinician efficiency through customization and personalization of EpicEpic
MethodsWe performed a retrospective analysis from July 2022 to January 2024, including 17 clinicians among 77 individuals who attended our course. Recruitment was done through digital mailers sent out via the local hospital announcement channels. Interested clinicians were able to register for our course via the National University Of Singapore website. Our one-day course involves physical lessons and interprofessional, case-based discussions emphasizing a wide range of high-yield EpicEpicEpicEpic
ResultsAt three months post-course, documentation length decreased by 45.8% (711.8 characters) compared to a 22.2% (126.4 characters) increase among controls. Trained clinicians demonstrated a 2.47-fold increase in use of order sets from 16.2% to 40%, and a 49.9% increase in orders from preference lists after the course, from 35.1% to 52.6%. In total, trained clinicians demonstrated a 1.8-fold increase in combined use of orders from preference lists or order sets after the course, from 51.4% to 92.6%. The number of SmartPhrases created by trained clinicians was 5.64 times higher than among controls, in addition to a 5.57-fold higher use of Quick Filters than controls. Moreover, time in the Chart Review section per day decreased by 29.3% (4.6 min) among trained clinicians versus an increase of 14.6% (2.8 min) among controls. Compared to controls, trained clinicians spent 36.7% (219.6 min) less time in the Epic
ConclusionsOverall, trained clinicians demonstrated more efficiency in their use of EpicEpic |
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ISSN: | 2561-326X |