Development and evaluation of an electronic hospital referral system: a human factors approach

Ergonomics. 2020 Jun;63(6):710-723. doi: 10.1080/00140139.2020.1748232. Epub 2020 Apr 28.

Abstract

Coordinating care across hospitals has been identified as a patient safety risk as referrals are often paper-based and poorly documented. Electronic referral systems have the potential to improve the situation but can fail to gain uptake. We applied a human factors/ergonomics (HFE) approach to place analysis of local workflow and user engagement central to the development of a new regional electronic referral system. The intervention was evaluated with a before-and-after study. Referral quality improved, referrals containing sufficient clinical information for continuation of care increased from 36.9% to 83.5% and completeness of referral information significantly improved. There was a 35.7% reduction in the number of calls to the on-call specialist, and the mean period between admission and surgery for expedited transfers was reduced. Applying HFE informed design with use-based evidence; the system maintains sustained uptake three years after implementation. Reliable recording of information translates to better patient safety during inter-hospital transitions. Practitioners summary: This study developed, implemented and evaluated a clinical referral system using a human factors approach. Process analysis and usability studies were used to inform the application requirements and design. Region-wide implementation in hospitals resulted in the improved quality and completeness of clinical referral information and efficiencies in the referral process.

Keywords: Hospital referral; ergonomics; health information technology; human factors; quality improvement.

MeSH terms

  • Health Information Exchange*
  • Hospitals*
  • Humans
  • Program Evaluation*
  • Quality Improvement*
  • Referral and Consultation*