{"status":"ok","message-type":"work","message-version":"1.0.0","message":{"indexed":{"date-parts":[[2026,3,24]],"date-time":"2026-03-24T11:28:11Z","timestamp":1774351691482,"version":"3.50.1"},"reference-count":30,"publisher":"Georg Thieme Verlag KG","issue":"02","content-domain":{"domain":[],"crossmark-restriction":false},"short-container-title":["Appl Clin Inform"],"published-print":{"date-parts":[[2021,3]]},"abstract":"<jats:title>Abstract<\/jats:title><jats:p>\n          Objective\u2003The objective of the study was to highlight and analyze the outcomes of software configuration requests received from Sprint, a comprehensive, clinic-centered electronic health record (EHR) optimization program.<\/jats:p><jats:p>\n          Methods\u2003A retrospective review of 1,254 Sprint workbook requests identified (1) the responsible EHR team, (2) the clinical efficiency gained from the request, and (3) the EHR intervention conducted.<\/jats:p><jats:p>\n          Results\u2003Requests were received from 407 clinicians and 538 staff over 31 weeks of Sprint. Sixty-nine percent of the requests were completed during the Sprint. Of all requests, 25% required net new build, 73% required technical investigation and\/or solutions, and 2% of the requests were escalated to the vendor. The clinical specialty groups requested a higher percentage of items that earned them clinical review (16 vs. 10%) and documentation (29 vs. 23%) efficiencies compared with their primary care colleagues who requested slightly more order modifications (22 vs. 20%). Clinical efficiencies most commonly associated with workbook requests included documentation (28%), ordering (20%), in basket (17%), and clinical review (15%). Sprint user requests evaluated by ambulatory, hardware, security, and training teams comprised 80% of reported items.<\/jats:p><jats:p>\n          Discussion\u2003Sprint requests were categorized as clean-up, break-fix, workflow investigation, or new build. On-site collaboration with clinical care teams permitted consensus-building, drove vetting, and iteration of EHR build, and led to goal-driven, usable workflows and EHR products.<\/jats:p><jats:p>\n          Conclusion\u2003This program evaluation demonstrates the process by which optimization can occur and the products that result when we adhere to optimization principles in health care organizations.<\/jats:p>","DOI":"10.1055\/s-0041-1728699","type":"journal-article","created":{"date-parts":[[2021,4,21]],"date-time":"2021-04-21T22:55:20Z","timestamp":1619045720000},"page":"329-339","source":"Crossref","is-referenced-by-count":13,"title":["Multidisciplinary Sprint Program Achieved Specialty-Specific EHR Optimization in 20 Clinics"],"prefix":"10.1055","volume":"12","author":[{"given":"Amber","family":"Sieja","sequence":"additional","affiliation":[{"name":"Department of Medicine, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado, United States"}]},{"given":"Eric","family":"Kim","sequence":"additional","affiliation":[{"name":"Department of Family Medicine, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado, United States"}]},{"given":"Heather","family":"Holmstrom","sequence":"additional","affiliation":[{"name":"Department of Family Medicine, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado, United States"}]},{"given":"Stephen","family":"Rotholz","sequence":"additional","affiliation":[{"name":"Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado, United States"}]},{"given":"Chen Tan","family":"Lin","sequence":"additional","affiliation":[{"name":"Department of Medicine, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado, United States"}]},{"given":"Christine","family":"Gonzalez","sequence":"additional","affiliation":[{"name":"University of Colorado Health, Aurora, Colorado, United States"}]},{"given":"Cortney","family":"Arellano","sequence":"additional","affiliation":[{"name":"University of Colorado Health, Aurora, Colorado, United States"}]},{"given":"Sarah","family":"Hutchings","sequence":"additional","affiliation":[{"name":"University of Colorado Health, Aurora, Colorado, United States"}]},{"given":"Denise","family":"Henderson","sequence":"additional","affiliation":[{"name":"University of Colorado Health, Aurora, Colorado, United States"}]},{"given":"Katie","family":"Markley","sequence":"additional","affiliation":[{"name":"University of Colorado Health Medical Group and University of Colorado Health, Aurora, Colorado, United States"}]}],"member":"194","published-online":{"date-parts":[[2021,4,21]]},"reference":[{"issue":"06","key":"ref3","doi-asserted-by":"crossref","first-page":"573","DOI":"10.1370\/afm.1713","article-title":"From triple to quadruple aim: care of the patient requires care of the provider","volume":"12","author":"T Bodenheimer","year":"2014","journal-title":"Ann Fam Med"},{"issue":"01","key":"ref4","doi-asserted-by":"crossref","first-page":"261","DOI":"10.1007\/s11606-019-05381-0","article-title":"frontline perspectives on physician burnout and strategies to improve well-being: interviews with physicians and health system leaders","volume":"35","author":"E C Dillon","year":"2020","journal-title":"J Gen Intern Med"},{"issue":"02","key":"ref5","doi-asserted-by":"crossref","first-page":"106","DOI":"10.1093\/jamia\/ocy145","article-title":"Physician stress and burnout: the impact of health information technology","volume":"26","author":"R L Gardner","year":"2019","journal-title":"J Am Med Inform Assoc"},{"issue":"10","key":"ref6","doi-asserted-by":"crossref","first-page":"1317","DOI":"10.1001\/jamainternmed.2018.3713","article-title":"Association between physician burnout and patient safety, professionalism and patient satisfaction: a systematic review and meta-analysis","volume":"178","author":"M Panagioti","year":"2018","journal-title":"JAMA Intern Med"},{"issue":"07","key":"ref7","doi-asserted-by":"crossref","first-page":"836","DOI":"10.1016\/j.mayocp.2016.05.007","article-title":"Relationship between clerical burden and characteristics of the electronic environment with physician burnout and professional satisfaction","volume":"91","author":"T D Shanafelt","year":"2016","journal-title":"Mayo Clin Proc"},{"issue":"11","key":"ref8","doi-asserted-by":"crossref","first-page":"753","DOI":"10.7326\/M16-0961","article-title":"Allocation of physician time in ambulatory practice: a time and motion study in 4 specialties","volume":"165","author":"C Sinsky","year":"2016","journal-title":"Ann Intern Med"},{"issue":"04","key":"ref9","doi-asserted-by":"crossref","first-page":"655","DOI":"10.1377\/hlthaff.2016.0811","article-title":"Electronic health record logs indicate that physicians split time evenly between seeing patients and desktop medicine","volume":"36","author":"M Tai-Seale","year":"2017","journal-title":"Health Aff (Millwood)"},{"issue":"02","key":"ref10","doi-asserted-by":"crossref","first-page":"91","DOI":"10.22454\/FamMed.2018.184803","article-title":"A time-motion study of primary care physicians' work in the electronic health record era","volume":"50","author":"R A Young","year":"2018","journal-title":"Fam Med"},{"issue":"03","key":"ref12","first-page":"142","article-title":"Approaches and challenges to optimising primary care teams' electronic health record usage","volume":"21","author":"N Pandhi","year":"2014","journal-title":"Inform Prim Care"},{"key":"ref13","volume-title":"Defining and Testing EMR Usability: Principles and Proposed Methods of EMR Usability Evaluation and Rating","author":"J Belden","year":"2009"},{"issue":"05","key":"ref14","doi-asserted-by":"crossref","first-page":"547","DOI":"10.1197\/jamia.M2042","article-title":"Types of unintended consequences related to computerized provider order entry","volume":"13","author":"E M Campbell","year":"2006","journal-title":"J Am Med Inform Assoc"},{"issue":"01","key":"ref15","first-page":"7","article-title":"New unintended adverse consequences of electronic health records","volume":"1","author":"D F Sittig","year":"2016","journal-title":"Yearb Med Inform"},{"issue":"04","key":"ref16","first-page":"1000240","article-title":"Physician opinions about EHR use by EHR experience and by whether the practice had optimized it's EHR use","volume":"7","author":"E W Jamoom","year":"2016","journal-title":"J Health Med Inform"},{"issue":"05","key":"ref17","doi-asserted-by":"crossref","first-page":"41","DOI":"10.1111\/j.1945-1474.2010.00107.x","article-title":"Moving from good to great in ambulatory electronic health record implementation","volume":"32","author":"A S McAlearney","year":"2010","journal-title":"J Healthc Qual"},{"issue":"02","key":"ref18","first-page":"109","article-title":"Understanding optimization processes of electronic health records (EHR) in select leading hospitals: a qualitative study","volume":"25","author":"M C Moon","year":"2018","journal-title":"J Innov Health Inform"},{"key":"ref19","volume-title":"Lessons from the literature on Electronic Health Record Implementation: A Study Funded by the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology of the U.S","author":"F Blavin","year":"2013"},{"issue":"24","key":"ref20","doi-asserted-by":"crossref","first-page":"2243","DOI":"10.1056\/NEJMp1204980","article-title":"Unraveling the IT productivity paradox--lessons for health care","volume":"366","author":"S S Jones","year":"2012","journal-title":"N Engl J Med"},{"issue":"02","key":"ref21","doi-asserted-by":"crossref","first-page":"104","DOI":"10.1197\/jamia.M1471","article-title":"Some unintended consequences of information technology in health care: the nature of patient care information system-related errors","volume":"11","author":"J S Ash","year":"2004","journal-title":"J Am Med Inform Assoc"},{"issue":"06","key":"ref22","first-page":"1072","article-title":"Taming the EHR (electronic health record): there is hope","volume":"3","author":"Y T DiAngi","year":"2016","journal-title":"J Fam Med"},{"issue":"02","key":"ref23","doi-asserted-by":"crossref","first-page":"331","DOI":"10.1055\/s-0039-1688753","article-title":"Local investment in training drives electronic health record user satisfaction","volume":"10","author":"C A Longhurst","year":"2019","journal-title":"Appl Clin Inform"},{"key":"ref24","volume-title":"The Role of Health IT Developers in Improving Patient Safety in HRO's","author":"R M Ratwani","year":"2014"},{"issue":"02","key":"ref25","first-page":"30","article-title":"Trend: EHR optimization. Post-implementation advancements. Leaders from various healthcare organizations explain how they have been moving forward with their EHRs following implementation","volume":"31","author":"R Leventhal","year":"2014","journal-title":"Healthc Inform"},{"issue":"02","key":"ref26","first-page":"105","article-title":"Physician-organization collaboration reduces physician burnout and promotes engagement: the Mayo Clinic experience","volume":"61","author":"S Swensen","year":"2016","journal-title":"J Healthc Manag"},{"issue":"07","key":"ref27","doi-asserted-by":"crossref","first-page":"673","DOI":"10.1093\/jamia\/ocz021","article-title":"The complex case of EHRs: examining the factors impacting the EHR user experience","volume":"26","author":"M A Tutty","year":"2019","journal-title":"J Am Med Inform Assoc"},{"issue":"05","key":"ref28","doi-asserted-by":"crossref","first-page":"793","DOI":"10.1016\/j.mayocp.2018.08.036","article-title":"Optimization sprints: improving clinician satisfaction and teamwork by rapidly reducing electronic health burden","volume":"94","author":"A Sieja","year":"2019","journal-title":"Mayo Clin Proc"},{"issue":"38","key":"ref29","doi-asserted-by":"crossref","first-page":"e12319","DOI":"10.1097\/MD.0000000000012319","article-title":"Novel electronic health record (EHR) education intervention in large healthcare organization improves quality, efficiency, time, and impact on burnout","volume":"97","author":"K E Robinson","year":"2018","journal-title":"Medicine (Baltimore)"},{"issue":"03","key":"ref30","doi-asserted-by":"crossref","first-page":"924","DOI":"10.4338\/ACI-2017-04-0054","article-title":"Designing an individualized EHR learning plan for providers","volume":"8","author":"L A Stevens","year":"2017","journal-title":"Appl Clin Inform"},{"issue":"07","key":"ref31","doi-asserted-by":"crossref","first-page":"e421","DOI":"10.1200\/JOP.18.00093","article-title":"Implementation to optimization: a tailored, data-driven approach to improve provider efficiency and confidence in use of the electronic medical record","volume":"14","author":"S S Kadish","year":"2018","journal-title":"J Oncol Pract"},{"key":"ref33","volume-title":"The Scrum Guide (2020)","author":"K Schwaber"},{"issue":"08","key":"ref34","doi-asserted-by":"crossref","first-page":"539","DOI":"10.1200\/JOP.2017.024745","article-title":"Usability considerations in oncology electronic medical records","volume":"13","author":"M J Hassett","year":"2017","journal-title":"J Oncol Pract"}],"container-title":["Applied Clinical Informatics"],"original-title":[],"language":"en","link":[{"URL":"http:\/\/www.thieme-connect.de\/products\/ejournals\/pdf\/10.1055\/s-0041-1728699.pdf","content-type":"unspecified","content-version":"vor","intended-application":"similarity-checking"}],"deposited":{"date-parts":[[2021,4,21]],"date-time":"2021-04-21T22:56:24Z","timestamp":1619045784000},"score":1,"resource":{"primary":{"URL":"http:\/\/www.thieme-connect.de\/DOI\/DOI?10.1055\/s-0041-1728699"}},"subtitle":[],"short-title":[],"issued":{"date-parts":[[2021,3]]},"references-count":30,"journal-issue":{"issue":"02","published-online":{"date-parts":[[2021,3,17]]},"published-print":{"date-parts":[[2021,3]]}},"URL":"https:\/\/doi.org\/10.1055\/s-0041-1728699","relation":{},"ISSN":["1869-0327"],"issn-type":[{"value":"1869-0327","type":"electronic"}],"subject":[],"published":{"date-parts":[[2021,3]]}}}