Skip to main content
. 2022 Apr 29;163:104783. doi: 10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2022.104783

Summary Table.

What is already known What this study adds

  • Nursing studies most often examined compliance, usability or satisfaction with the EMR system

    Nurses’ EMR experiences of implementation and consequences for their well-being and work satisfaction are unknown

  • Measures of nurses’ work engagement, satisfaction, intention to stay, burnout and well-being worsened post-implementation of an organisation-wide EMR system

    The unique timing of the natural experiment captured data about nurses’ psychosocial well-being at an Australian healthcare organisation before and after an EMR implementation and experiencing the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic

    Strategies are needed to improve nurses’ EMR experiences and psychosocial well-being to support nurse workforce retention, productivity and quality patient care delivery

    Qualitative studies to explore and understand nurses’ EMR experiences can further reduce the gap in knowledge about EMR burden and workforce impacts