Go-Live Clinical Adoption – 10 Tips
The EHR Implementation Go-Live Series
In this blog post we discuss 10 tips to meeting the needs of your clinicians and physicians when implementing new technology.
You must intentionally manage the cultural, behavioral and organizational changes that need to happen to make the EHR fully functional and gain the intended value. Clinical Adoption revolves around meeting the needs of your clinicians and physicians when implementing new technology, maximizing the efficiency and value gained. Consider these 10 tips for an effective transition to, or utilization of, an existing EHR:
1) Develop an effective change management strategy beyond Go-Live
that includes staff and providers at all levels of the organization. Executive leadership, management, providers and front-line staff are all key players who need to be engaged with defined roles and responsibilities during and after implementation. An engaged team willing to support the change is the biggest contributor to successful adoption.
2) Identify executive sponsorship.
The engagement of leadership helps everyone move through the change process and ensures a consistent message to your staff. If leadership is not on board with the change, the staff will be reluctant to support it. Providing leadership with the tools to help reinforce the change improves their ability to engage staff.
3) Dedicate front-line clinicians and providers to lead the change.
Front-line staff and providers are the key influencers of their peers and will recognize enabling factors and identify potential barriers before they are operationalized. They are the best source of truth when it comes to assessing adoption.
4) Conduct workflow analysis and redesign.
Existing workflow issues, if not addressed, will become more visible with technology. Utilize the technology to eliminate redundant, time-consuming processes and consider re-engineering staff roles and responsibilities that are replaced by the technology.
5) Plan out-of-the-box communication and marketing strategies.
Organizational change is becoming more frequent resulting in the need to continually evaluate and revise communication strategies. Communicate the overall benefits of the EHR implementation and technology to help each member of your staff understand how they will personally benefit by it. Informed staff and providers are more likely to stay engaged and work together to achieve success.
6) Define and execute a metric plan to measure results.
Clearly define and communicate the factors critical to success and create a metric plan to gauge success and improve your processes after the EHR implementation.
7) Define and execute a metric plan to monitor adoption and identify follow-up opportunities.
Utilize metrics to monitor adoption and focus on areas of opportunity for further education, system, and/or process redesign. Staff will likely not remember everything that is taught. Metrics allow you to identify and intervene with individuals who may be struggling with the transition and/or help prioritize areas of intervention.
8) Use an effective, repeatable optimization methodology.
A repeatable methodology to address issues and opportunities allows for a consistent, efficient process. Executives, management, clinicians and providers will be accustomed to a consistent methodology and are more likely to embrace it when they understand and can anticipate it.
9) Integrate with your clinical IT roadmap.
Expect that optimization will be an ongoing need and efforts will still be needed after the initial “Go-Live” to make it stick. Existing technologies will be constantly replaced with new and improved enhancements, and/or opportunities to improve initial design will be realized. Allocating optimization resources on the strategic roadmap and budgeting process will ensure resources are available to support existing technologies, while new required functionalities are being implemented. Clinicians and providers will have an understanding that there is a dynamic process in place to address their needs.
10) Engage highly trained staff to execute the methodology.
Ultimately, success depends on having well-trained, well-prepared staff not only inside your practice or institution, but also having an expert team on hand with deep experience in EHR implementation, optimization and adoption. Engaging proven professionals to assist with your efforts and train your staff on a repeatable proven methodology will ensure you are in a place to satisfy your clinicians and providers, serve your patients, and meet regulatory standards.