Objective: Many hospitals are investing in computer-based provider
order-entry (POE) systems, and providers' evaluations have proved important
for the success of the systems. The authors assessed how physicians and
nurses viewed the effects of one modified commercial POE system on time
spent patients, resource utilization, errors with orders,
and overall quality of care.
Design: Survey.
Measurements: Opinions of 271 POE users on medicine wards of
an urban teaching hospital: 96 medical house officers, 49 attending physicians,
19 clinical fellows with heavy inpatient loads, and 107 nurses.
Results: Responses were received from 85 percent of the sample.
Most physicians and nurses agreed that orders were executed faster under
POE. About 30 percent of house officers and attendings or fellows, compared
with 56 percent of nurses, reported improvement in overall quality of care
with POE. Forty-four percent of house officers and 34 percent of attendings/fellows
reported that their time with patients decreased, whereas 56 percent of
nurses indicated that their time with patients increased (P < 0.001).
Sixty percent of house officers and 41 percent of attendings/fellows indicated
that order errors increased, whereas 69 percent of nurses indicated a decrease
or no change in errors. Although most nurses reported no change in the
frequency of ordering tests and medications with POE, 61 percent of house
officers reported an increased frequency.
Conclusion: Physicians and nurses had markedly different views
about effects of a POE system on patient care, highlighting the need to
consider both perspectives when assessing the impact of POE. With this
POE system, most nurses saw beneficial effects, whereas many physicians
saw negative effects.