4.3 Article

Building Back Better: Applying Lessons from the COVID-19 Pandemic to Expand Critical Information Access

Journal

JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE
Volume 61, Issue 5, Pages 607-614

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jemermed.2021.03.014

Keywords

COVID-19; clinical guidelines; digital; innovation; information; design

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Utilizing a design-thinking approach, a low-cost clinical information hub E*Drive was developed, significantly improving the accessibility of clinical guidelines and increasing user satisfaction.
Background: The Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic generated an unprecedented volume of evolving clinical guidelines that strained existing clinical information systems and necessitated rapid innovation in emergency departments (EDs). Objectives: Our team aimed to harness new COVID-19-related reliance on digital clinical support tools to re-envision how all clinical guidelines are stored and accessed in our ED. Methods: We used a design-thinking approach including empathizing, defining the problem, ideating, prototyping, and testing to develop a low-cost, homegrown clinical information hub: E*Drive. To measure impact, we compared web traffic on E*Drive to our legacy cloud-based folder system and conducted a survey of end-users using a validated health technology utilization instrument. Results: Our final product, E*Drive, is a centralized clinical information hub storing everything from clinical guidelines to discharge resources. Clinical guidelines are standardized and housed within the high-traffic E*Drive platform to increase accessibility. Since launch, E*Drive has averaged 84 unique weekly users, compared with less than one weekly user on the legacy system. We surveyed 52 clinicians for a total response rate of 47 %. Prior to the E*Drive rollout, 12.5% of ED clinicians felt confident accessing clinical information on the legacy system, whereas 76.6% of ED clinicians felt they could more easily access clinical information using E*Drive. Conclusion: The COVID pandemic revealed vulnerabilities within our information dissemination system and presented an opportunity to improve clinical information delivery. Centralized web-based clinical information hubs designed around the clinician end-user experience can increase clinical guideline access in the ED. (C) 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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