Article Preview
TopIntroduction
As far back as the early 1960’s computer technology has been applied to help solve healthcare issues (Saba, Johnson, & Simpson, 1994). Starting in the 1970’s, intelligent computer applications to improve healthcare problem solving had arrived (Schwartz, 1970). While Schwartz (1970) incorrectly implied that computers would eventually replace physicians, many of the other forecasts on the impact of computer technology in healthcare, such as improving data availability and improving decision making, have been realized. Nearly four decades later, health information technology professionals continue to advocate for further development of information systems technologies in healthcare to create a nationwide infrastructure for sharing health information to improve patient outcomes and reduce medical costs (Chopra, 2009).
The advent of electronic health records (EHRs) and health information exchanges (HIEs) have certainly provided a means for more rapid and reliable access to patient information to improve the quality of care (Topaz et al., 2013). EHRs are utilized worldwide to improve health delivery systems (Wager, Lee, & Glaser, 2013).
However, EHRs still experience resistance to use from physicians and staff (McAlearney et al., 2015; Wang et al., 2015). Despite improved information flow afforded by EHRs and HIEs, this resistance has resulted in information overload and the need to find better ways to extract reliable information (Huang et al., 2015). For instance, Pickering et al. (2013) demonstrated that physicians use a relatively small amount of information available in EHRs when determining which patients to admit to an ICU, indicating that often too much information is available for decision making and leading to information overload.
Although there is still a long way to go before the ubiquitous acceptance of healthcare information technologies (HIT), healthcare is becoming an ever more information based and information dependent science (Ikram, Ghani, & Abdullah, 2015). Advances in information and communication technologies have led to the availability and generation of vast amounts of data (Esfandiari et al., 2014), especially in clinical medicine (Bellazzi & Zupan, 2008).
Clinical decision support systems, which are defined as “computer systems designed to impact clinician decision making at the point in time that these decisions are made (Berner & Lande, 2007, pg. 3),” are providing mechanisms for delivering clinical information in a usable format to decision makers (Bellazzi & Zupan, 2008). Improving rates of acceptance of clinical decision support systems may be due in part to the concern of physicians and other medical providers about the quantity of information needed to provide high quality health care and to avoid costly and life-threatening errors (Musen, Shahar, & Shortliffe, 2006).