Health information technology holds promise to solve challenges in primary health care related to workforce shortages, quality improvement and increasing patient engagement in their care. Clinical health technology, such as electronic health records, may augment primary care provider capabilities so that they may be able to do more with less, therefore providing better care to increasing numbers of patients with greater clinical complexity. Consumer health technologies may help provide providers with better information about their patients’ needs and behaviors outside of the clinic. These technologies also hold the promise of allowing patients to better manage their own health and wellness at home, so that they can better adhere to care plans. The promise of technology to improve primary care is great and attainable, but additional research is needed to make these goals a reality. Challenges to achieving these goals include a deficient of basic research about primary care work, care provider needs and patient capabilities and limitations. This basic science is needed to design technologies that can be integrated in primary care work systems and patient lives. Without human and system centered designs technologies can add additional complexity, frustration and diminish trust between patients and providers. Additional research is also needed to better understand the successes and failures of technology in primary care environments.
Primary care is the first point of care for most patients and is characterized by a long-term relationship between a patient and their care provider. The Institute of Medicine defines primary care as ‘the provision of integrated, accessible health care services by clinicians who are accountable for addressing a large majority of personal health care needs, developing a sustained partnership with patients, and practicing in the context of family and community’ (p. 15) (Donaldson et al., Reference Donaldson, Yordy and Vanselow1994; Reference Donaldson, Yordy, Lohr and Vanselow1996). By definition primary care providers are responsible for many health care system goals such as providing health education, disease prevention, continuity of care, integrated care, health promotion, in addition to diagnosis and treatment. Primary care providers are trained to provide comprehensive, first contact and continuing care for persons with any undiagnosed illness, symptom, or health concern. Primary care physicians are often the first to identify and diagnosis major chronic diseases and illnesses such as cancer, diabetes, heart disease, hypertension, and depression. In addition to diagnosis, much of the care for chronic illnesses has shifted to primary care settings. Eight-seven percent of Americans aged 65–79 live with at least one chronic condition and the place of care for this population has largely shifted to primary care settings; this shift is expected to increase – adding additional strain to the primary care system. More generally, 57 million people in the United States lived with multiple chronic conditions in 2000 and this number is expected to increase to 81 million by 2020 (Wolff et al., Reference Wolff, Starfield and Anderson2002). Primary care will likely be the place of care for these patients for diagnosis, treatment, and recovery of their conditions. Technology may be able to augment primary care provider capabilities and use of such technologies may be one defining feature of future primary health care provision (Bryar et al., Reference Bryar, Kendall and Mogotlane2012) to better engage patients in their care as the number of patients grow and their health needs increase in complexity.
Primary care is a national and global concern, the World Health Organization advocates for a comprehensive primary health care system as primary health care results in better health outcomes, reduced health disparities and lower costs, including reduced spending on avoidable emergency room visits and hospital care (WHO, 2008). One barrier to achieving this goal is the growing deficit of primary care providers in the United States and throughout the world. There are increasingly more patients who have access to care, coupled with a growing population of patients that have complex health care needs (eg, older, more chronic disease, increased comorbidities), which is exponentially exceeding the supply of qualified primary care providers (Petterson et al., Reference Petterson, Liaw, Phillips, Rabin, Meyers and Bazemore2012). Additionally, fewer physicians in the United States are choosing to work in primary care environments, and many physicians are leaving the primary care workforce, which contributes to a growing deficient. With fewer physicians practicing, there are also fewer opportunities for training and mentoring new physicians.
The Maslach Burnout Inventory was used to study burnout and satisfaction among US physicians, results show that 38% of physicians surveyed reported high emotional exhaustion, 29% had high depersonalization, and 12% had a low sense of personal accomplishment, with primary care physicians (internal medicine and family medicine) having the highest amounts of burnout (Shanafelt et al., Reference Shanafelt, Boone, Tan, Dyrbye, Sotile, Satele, West, Sloan and Oreskovich2012). This rate of burnout is disproportionately higher for women (McMurray et al., Reference McMurray, Linzer, Konrad, Douglas, Shugerman and Nelson2000) and physicians who provide care in minority serving clinics (Varkey et al., Reference Varkey, Manwell, Williams, Ibrahim, Brown, Bobula, Horner-Ibler, Schwartz, Konrad and Wiltshire2009). Lower pay, high workloads, long hours, and a sense of being undervalued may be influencing primary care physicians to leave the field prematurely while simultaneously preventing young physicians from entering the profession (NEHI, 2009). The proportion of primary care physicians in the United States has decreased from 50% of all physicians in 1950 to just over 30% in 2007 (NEHI, 2009). While technologies such as electronic health records were designed to improve physician work life and mitigate some aspects of burnout, recent studies are showing that electronic health records may significantly worsen professional satisfaction for primary care physicians (Babbott et al., Reference Babbott, Manwell, Brown, Montague, Williams, Schwartz, Hess and Linzer2013; Friedberg et al., Reference Friedberg, Chen, Busum, Aunon, Pham, Caloyeras, Mattke, Pitchforth, Quigley, Brook, Crosson and Tutty2013). The factors listed as contributors to low satisfaction with electronic health records are largely related to electronic health record (EHR) usability and poor integration into care.
EHR systems
EHRs are able to integrate patients’ retrospective, concurrent, and prospective health information and are easily accessible to different caregivers as well as public health agencies and research organizations. Compared with paper-based health records, EHRs improve quality, efficiency and continuity of health care by facilitating coordinated approaches among different caregivers and enabling tracking of people’s health information and care activities. A survey involving clinicians and administrative staff reported increased efficiency in retrieving medical records, storing patient information, coordination of care, and office operations (Goetz Goldberg et al., Reference Goetz Goldberg, Kuzel, Feng, DeShazo and Love2012). Another study of 16 352 nurses working in 316 hospitals in four states suggested that the implementation of a basic EHR may result in improved and more efficient nursing care, better care coordination, and patient safety (Kutney-Lee and Kelly, Reference Kutney-Lee and Kelly2011). EHRs can also provide timely updated data for public health surveillance and research to inform public health practice and health policy planning, which benefits the health of more people with lower costs (Hayrinen et al., Reference Hayrinen, Saranto and Nykanen2008).
Widespread implementation and usage of EHRs and other health information technologies may improve the quality and efficiency of health care in the United States (Chaudhry et al., Reference Chaudhry, Wang, Wu, Maglione, Mojica, Roth, Morton and Shekelle2006; Fang et al., Reference Fang, Peifer, Chen and Rizzo2011). Barriers to implementing EHRs include costs, the need for training, and the culture change required to embrace technology (Cherry and Ali, Reference Cherry and Ali2008). The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act provided a $19 billion fund to promote the adoption of EHRs with the requirement of ‘meaningful use’. This requirement states that EHRs should be used effectively and provide quality and efficiency in the health care system (Blumenthal, Reference Blumenthal2009). Despite this goal, a National Research Council (NRC) report indicates that current EHR technologies are poorly designed; and more specifically the technology does not compliment care providers cognitive capabilities and needs (Stead and Lin, Reference Stead and Lin2009). Furthermore, the NRC report states that current EHRs are not designed with human-computer interaction and human factors and ergonomics design principles, which contributes to inefficient use (Stead and Lin, Reference Stead and Lin2009). One reason for poorly designed technologies is that there is very little basic research about the science of how primary care providers work. Future studies should continue to explore how primary care providers work and think to better develop guidelines for technologies that are safe, easy to use, efficient, and effective.
Consumer health technologies
Primary care is the de facto location for most patient care and prevention; it is also an ideal site for the integration of patient-facing or consumer health technologies. These tools range from mobile technologies to help patients manage their specific symptoms to patient portals that allow patients to keep track of the care they receive through a personal health record. Two challenges exist with incorporating consumer health technologies into primary care, first is that long-term adoption is generally low for mobile health technologies and other applications that patients can find in the consumer market (Montague, Reference Montague2012). For many of these applications, patients may download and try for a short amount of time, but utilization declines after a week. This low adoption may be related to poor usability, where tools are not designed with patients’ needs in mind, or usefulness, where the tools are simply not effective at managing health or helping with behavior changes. More research is needed to determine which technologies will be useful for patients and how to design usable technologies that can be integrated into patients’ lives.
Adoption of personal health records is rising, but there is a growing digital divide where unrepresented minorities and traditional underserved patients lag in adoption and utilization (Yamin et al., Reference Yamin, Emani, Williams, Lipsitz, Karson, Wald and Bates2011). The second challenge with consumer health technologies is that while patients may benefit from using technology to manage their medication regimens or change health behaviors, these technologies are not regularly incorporated into the primary care system. Care providers often do not have access to the data that patients are collecting about themselves and are therefore unable to provide clinical oversight and feedback that may help the patient or recognize errors. Integrating data from patients into clinical encounters requires a better understanding of primary care work and clinician information needs as well as innovation in clinical informatics. Designing tools that patients find both useful and usable requires a better understanding of patients’ needs and lives outside of the health care system.
Technology is capable of transforming primary care and thus solving some of the growing challenges that limit its current reach. Technology may allow care providers to be more efficient and effective, and improve providers’ quality of life. Technology may also be able to improve patient physician relationships, by better engaging patients in their care through new and innovative tools. However, in order for these changes to become a reality additional work is needed to better understand primary care, and a better understanding of how to translate primary care needs into usable and useful technologies for patients and providers.