Effects of Hospital Digitization on Clinical Outcomes and Patient Satisfaction: Nationwide Multiple Regression Analysis Across German Hospitals

BackgroundThe adoption of health information technology (HIT) by health care providers is commonly believed to improve the quality of care. Policy makers in the United States and Germany follow this logic and deploy nationwide HIT adoption programs to fund hospital investment...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Philip von Wedel, Christian Hagist, Jan-David Liebe, Moritz Esdar, Ursula Hübner, Christoph Pross
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2022-11-01
Series:Journal of Medical Internet Research
Online Access:https://www.jmir.org/2022/11/e40124
_version_ 1797734644733444096
author Philip von Wedel
Christian Hagist
Jan-David Liebe
Moritz Esdar
Ursula Hübner
Christoph Pross
author_facet Philip von Wedel
Christian Hagist
Jan-David Liebe
Moritz Esdar
Ursula Hübner
Christoph Pross
author_sort Philip von Wedel
collection DOAJ
description BackgroundThe adoption of health information technology (HIT) by health care providers is commonly believed to improve the quality of care. Policy makers in the United States and Germany follow this logic and deploy nationwide HIT adoption programs to fund hospital investments in digital technologies. However, scientific evidence for the beneficial effects of HIT on care quality at a national level remains mostly US based, is focused on electronic health records (EHRs), and rarely accounts for the quality of digitization from a hospital user perspective. ObjectiveThis study aimed to examine the effects of digitization on clinical outcomes and patient experience in German hospitals. Hence, this study adds to the small stream of literature in this field outside the United States. It goes beyond assessing the effects of mere HIT adoption and also considers user-perceived HIT value. In addition, the impact of a variety of technologies beyond EHRs was examined. MethodsMultiple linear regression models were estimated using emergency care outcomes, elective care outcomes, and patient satisfaction as dependent variables. The adoption and user-perceived value of HIT represented key independent variables, and case volume, hospital size, ownership status, and teaching status were included as controls. Care outcomes were captured via risk-adjusted, observed-to-expected outcome ratios for patients who had stroke, myocardial infarction, or hip replacement. The German Patient Experience Questionnaire of Weisse Liste provided information on patient satisfaction. Information on the adoption and user-perceived value of 10 subdomains of HIT and EHRs was derived from the German 2020 Healthcare IT Report. ResultsStatistical analysis was based on an overall sample of 383 German hospitals. The analyzed data set suggested no significant effect of HIT or EHR adoption on clinical outcomes or patient satisfaction. However, a higher user-perceived value or quality of the installed tools did improve outcomes. Emergency care outcomes benefited from user-friendly overall digitization (β=−.032; P=.04), which was especially driven by the user-friendliness of admission HIT (β=−.023; P=.07). Elective care outcomes were positively impacted by user-friendly EHR installations (β=−.138; P=.008). Similarly, the results suggested user-friendly, overall digitization to have a moderate positive effect on patient satisfaction (β=−.009; P=.01). ConclusionsThe results of this study suggest that hospital digitization is not an end in itself. Policy makers and hospitals are well advised to not only focus on the mere adoption of digital technologies but also continuously work toward digitization that is perceived as valuable by physicians and nurses who rely on it every day. Furthermore, hospital digitization strategies should consider that the assumed benefits of single technologies are not realized across all care domains.
first_indexed 2024-03-12T12:47:21Z
format Article
id doaj.art-5babedbd7a5241558a1a981a5a43814e
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1438-8871
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-12T12:47:21Z
publishDate 2022-11-01
publisher JMIR Publications
record_format Article
series Journal of Medical Internet Research
spelling doaj.art-5babedbd7a5241558a1a981a5a43814e2023-08-28T23:16:02ZengJMIR PublicationsJournal of Medical Internet Research1438-88712022-11-012411e4012410.2196/40124Effects of Hospital Digitization on Clinical Outcomes and Patient Satisfaction: Nationwide Multiple Regression Analysis Across German HospitalsPhilip von Wedelhttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-3035-9797Christian Hagisthttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-6322-3178Jan-David Liebehttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-4993-7884Moritz Esdarhttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-4371-3484Ursula Hübnerhttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-5372-2339Christoph Prosshttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-9973-3981 BackgroundThe adoption of health information technology (HIT) by health care providers is commonly believed to improve the quality of care. Policy makers in the United States and Germany follow this logic and deploy nationwide HIT adoption programs to fund hospital investments in digital technologies. However, scientific evidence for the beneficial effects of HIT on care quality at a national level remains mostly US based, is focused on electronic health records (EHRs), and rarely accounts for the quality of digitization from a hospital user perspective. ObjectiveThis study aimed to examine the effects of digitization on clinical outcomes and patient experience in German hospitals. Hence, this study adds to the small stream of literature in this field outside the United States. It goes beyond assessing the effects of mere HIT adoption and also considers user-perceived HIT value. In addition, the impact of a variety of technologies beyond EHRs was examined. MethodsMultiple linear regression models were estimated using emergency care outcomes, elective care outcomes, and patient satisfaction as dependent variables. The adoption and user-perceived value of HIT represented key independent variables, and case volume, hospital size, ownership status, and teaching status were included as controls. Care outcomes were captured via risk-adjusted, observed-to-expected outcome ratios for patients who had stroke, myocardial infarction, or hip replacement. The German Patient Experience Questionnaire of Weisse Liste provided information on patient satisfaction. Information on the adoption and user-perceived value of 10 subdomains of HIT and EHRs was derived from the German 2020 Healthcare IT Report. ResultsStatistical analysis was based on an overall sample of 383 German hospitals. The analyzed data set suggested no significant effect of HIT or EHR adoption on clinical outcomes or patient satisfaction. However, a higher user-perceived value or quality of the installed tools did improve outcomes. Emergency care outcomes benefited from user-friendly overall digitization (β=−.032; P=.04), which was especially driven by the user-friendliness of admission HIT (β=−.023; P=.07). Elective care outcomes were positively impacted by user-friendly EHR installations (β=−.138; P=.008). Similarly, the results suggested user-friendly, overall digitization to have a moderate positive effect on patient satisfaction (β=−.009; P=.01). ConclusionsThe results of this study suggest that hospital digitization is not an end in itself. Policy makers and hospitals are well advised to not only focus on the mere adoption of digital technologies but also continuously work toward digitization that is perceived as valuable by physicians and nurses who rely on it every day. Furthermore, hospital digitization strategies should consider that the assumed benefits of single technologies are not realized across all care domains.https://www.jmir.org/2022/11/e40124
spellingShingle Philip von Wedel
Christian Hagist
Jan-David Liebe
Moritz Esdar
Ursula Hübner
Christoph Pross
Effects of Hospital Digitization on Clinical Outcomes and Patient Satisfaction: Nationwide Multiple Regression Analysis Across German Hospitals
Journal of Medical Internet Research
title Effects of Hospital Digitization on Clinical Outcomes and Patient Satisfaction: Nationwide Multiple Regression Analysis Across German Hospitals
title_full Effects of Hospital Digitization on Clinical Outcomes and Patient Satisfaction: Nationwide Multiple Regression Analysis Across German Hospitals
title_fullStr Effects of Hospital Digitization on Clinical Outcomes and Patient Satisfaction: Nationwide Multiple Regression Analysis Across German Hospitals
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Hospital Digitization on Clinical Outcomes and Patient Satisfaction: Nationwide Multiple Regression Analysis Across German Hospitals
title_short Effects of Hospital Digitization on Clinical Outcomes and Patient Satisfaction: Nationwide Multiple Regression Analysis Across German Hospitals
title_sort effects of hospital digitization on clinical outcomes and patient satisfaction nationwide multiple regression analysis across german hospitals
url https://www.jmir.org/2022/11/e40124
work_keys_str_mv AT philipvonwedel effectsofhospitaldigitizationonclinicaloutcomesandpatientsatisfactionnationwidemultipleregressionanalysisacrossgermanhospitals
AT christianhagist effectsofhospitaldigitizationonclinicaloutcomesandpatientsatisfactionnationwidemultipleregressionanalysisacrossgermanhospitals
AT jandavidliebe effectsofhospitaldigitizationonclinicaloutcomesandpatientsatisfactionnationwidemultipleregressionanalysisacrossgermanhospitals
AT moritzesdar effectsofhospitaldigitizationonclinicaloutcomesandpatientsatisfactionnationwidemultipleregressionanalysisacrossgermanhospitals
AT ursulahubner effectsofhospitaldigitizationonclinicaloutcomesandpatientsatisfactionnationwidemultipleregressionanalysisacrossgermanhospitals
AT christophpross effectsofhospitaldigitizationonclinicaloutcomesandpatientsatisfactionnationwidemultipleregressionanalysisacrossgermanhospitals