Using a health information technology survey to explore the availability of addiction treatment data in the electronic health records: A National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network study

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsat.2020.01.015Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • Electronic health records (EHRs) data are critical data sources for pragmatic trials.

  • Complete and structured EHR data facilitate research use and reduce biases.

  • Sources of addiction treatment data not readily available in the EHRs were explored.

  • A wide variety of EHR platforms, including behavioral health EHRs, were identified.

  • Paper records were used frequently to support health care for addiction treatment.

Abstract

Background

Healthcare data from electronic health records (EHRs) and related health information technology (IT) tools are critical data sources for pragmatic clinical trials and observational studies aimed at producing real-world evidence. To unlock the full potential of such data to advance science, the data must be complete and in structured formats to facilitate research use.

Methods

A Health IT survey was conducted within the National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network (CTN) to explore information related to data completeness and presence of unstructured data (e.g., clinical notes, free text) for conducting the EHR-based research for substance use disorders (SUDs). The analysis was based on 36 participants from 36 facilities located in 14 states and affiliated with the CTN.

Results

The mean age of the participants (n = 34) was 48.0 years (SD = 9.8). Of the participants enrolled, 50.0% were female and 82.4% were white. Participants' facilities were from four census-defined regions (South 35.3%, Northeast 29.4%, West 20.6%, Midwest 11.8%, Missing 2.9%) and represented diverse settings. The EHR was used by all surveyed facilities including 17 different kinds of EHR platforms or vendors, and 17.6% (n = 6) of surveyed facilities also used a separate EHR for behavioral health care (e.g., SUD care). Paper records were also used by 76.5% of surveyed facilities for clinical care (e.g., for health risk appraisal questionnaires, substance use screening or assessment, check-in screening, substance use specific intervention/treatment or referral, or labs/testing). The prevalence of using a patient portal, practice management system, and mHealth for patient care was 76.5%, 50.0%, and 29.4%, respectively.

Conclusion

While results are descriptive in nature, they reveal the heterogeneity in the existing EHRs and frequent use of paper records to document patient care tasks, especially for SUD care. The use of a separate EHR for behavioral healthcare also suggests the challenge of obtaining complete EHR data to support research for SUDs. Much EHR development, integration, and standardization needs to be done especially in regard to SUD treatment to facilitate research across disparate healthcare systems.

Abbreviations

CDE
common data element
CMS
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
CTN
National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network
EHR
electronic health record
Heath IT
health information technology
NIDA
National Institute on Drug Abuse
SBIRT
substance use screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment
SUD
substance use disorder

Keywords

Clinical Trials Network
Common data elements
Electronic health records
Health information technology
Substance use disorder

Cited by (0)