Hello and welcome to the forum on eHealth Records (EHR). I have been corresponding with Peter for a few months and am very excited about his work and the chance to participate. Peter asked me to moderate this topic and I hope to help him by exploring with all of you your experience, ideas and perspectives. Already we are seeing so many interesting points of view. That, I think, is the key.
As to my own perspective, please allow me to describe my background (and I encourage you to do the same). I have a masters in HCI and have worked with medical information technology in three different academic hospitals for about ten years. I spent five years in outcomes research with a focus on using hospital information systems as a data resource. I was at IBM for four years as a usability specialist, but left to be the manager of periop information systems (operating room and all supporting areas) at a large urban academic hospital. They had recently implemented an EHR to support the OR and it was a disaster. I took this position because I believed that an HCI/user focused/methods based approach would prove effective. It did. Proof? Since space is short, how about this? OR nurses who literally cursed at me my first day (over the EHR) hugged me on my last. :-) For the last year or so I have worked for a pediatric hospital in a small research group exploring new applications added/embedded in the EHR to improve outcomes.
I have studied scores of hospital information systems in use and received extensive training/certification in a few (McKesson and Epic). Throughout all of this I wore my "HCI hat" in what I sometimes refer to as a ten year contextual inquiry of hospitals. I estimate I have spent 1,500 hours observing surgical procedures, cath lab procedures, shadowing nurses and physicians in the act of care giving (in patient and out) and studied the routines of other hospital staff including scheduling clerks, environmental services, sterilization, surgical techs, billing, materials management and others (all users of eHealth Records and other HIT). I have worked with data representing hundreds of thousands of patients. From all of this I have almost an endless supply of anecdotal observations, but in no way will I ever think I have seen it all or know it all. I think this is a fascinating field and what I enjoy about it most is learning about other people's work. So, in the posts to follow, please tell all of us about your background and how your experiences shape your perspectives and ideas.