Keywords

Acute care, Education, e-prescribing, Health information technology acceptance, Health information technology adoption, HIT, IT, Motivation, Prescribing

 

Authors

  1. Villasenor, Sally DNP, RN, ACNP-BC
  2. Walker, Tara DNP, RN, ACNP-BC
  3. Fetters, Lisa DNP, RN, AG-ACNP, CCNS-BC
  4. McCoy, Maryanne PhD, RN, ANP-BC, CCRN

Abstract

The study sought to determine the barriers to e-prescribing particular to the acute care setting, the educational and motivational needs of acute care providers, and the optimal process for incentive, education, and implementation of e-prescribing. A theoretically based survey instrument was adapted from previous work. Four domains were assessed: finesse, intent to use, perceived usefulness, and perceived ease of use. The survey was offered to a group of acute care providers. The educational and motivational needs of acute care providers are different from those in primary care. Perceived barriers centered on uncertain pharmacy hours, unconfirmed transmittal, and accidental transmission to wrong pharmacy. Healthcare providers with more self-assessed knowledge of e-prescribing are more likely to use e-prescribing. Providers with fewer years in practice seem to have greater knowledge of e-prescribing. Providing education and exposure to e-prescribing has the potential to decrease perception of barriers and increase perceived usefulness for acute care providers. Software redesign may be needed to remove barriers associated with uncertain pharmacy hours, controlled substance prescribing, transmittal confirmation, and bidirectional communication needs, thereby improving motivation to e-prescribe.