Objectives: The Veterans Health Administration (VA) is transitioning its 1,300 health care facilities from one electronic health record (EHR) to another. The transition aims to improve care delivery and interoperability; however, specific effects on women veterans, who comprise only 7.5% of the patient population, may be obscured without focused evaluation. We aimed to characterize the perspectives of VA staff regarding the impact of transitioning EHRs on women's health care delivery.
Methods: We conducted semistructured interviews with VA staff members involved in delivering or coordinating care for women at three sites that had transitioned EHRs within the past year. Interviews were audio-recorded and transcribed. We used a rapid, templated qualitative analytic approach to identify salient themes in the data.
Results: We interviewed 16 staff members across VA departments and roles. Although some participants felt the new EHR held promise, most identified challenges with the EHR rollout and implementation (e.g., insufficient training) and the EHR product (e.g., system inefficiencies and latency). Participants highlighted several ways the EHR transition disproportionately affected care delivery for women veterans, including via backlogs of community care referrals, insufficient opportunities for providers to gain proficiency with sex-specific workflows in the new EHR, and outdated listings for veterans who have changed their names. Participants reported that these issues affected their morale and contributed to decreases in productivity and delayed care.
Conclusions: Many of our findings reflect challenges that affect VA staff broadly, whereas others may be compounded among women veterans and the VA staff who serve them. To achieve the goal of delivering timely, equitable, high-quality, comprehensive health care services to women veterans, continued efforts to monitor and address the impacts of the EHR transition on this population are needed.
Published by Elsevier Inc.