NURS FPX 6020 Assessment 3: looks at how well Electronic Health Record (EHR) systems work to improve patient care, safety, and workflow integration. The assessment highlights usability, interoperability, data security, and clinical decision support as key factors influencing nurse satisfaction and patient outcomes. While EHRs like Epic enhance documentation accuracy, real-time communication, and patient safety, challenges such as alert fatigue, system complexity, and poor integration with non-EHR platforms can limit effectiveness. Nurses play a central role in evaluating these systems, identifying gaps, providing recommendations, and advocating for system improvements to ensure both clinical efficiency and patient-centered care.
• Introduce the clinical issue or topic • Explain its relevance to nursing practice • State the purpose of the assessment
• Describe databases and search strategies used • Explain criteria for selecting credible sources • Discuss evaluation of source quality and relevance
• Summarize key findings from research sources • Compare and contrast different perspectives • Identify patterns and themes in the evidence
• Explain how research informs clinical decisions • Provide specific examples of practice applications • Discuss implications for patient outcomes
• Summarize key points and findings • Reinforce the importance of evidence-based practice • Suggest areas for future research or practice improvement
In the modern electronic health care setting, health information technology (megahit) plays a pivotal part in perfecting patient care, workflow, and validation-predicated practice. Nurses are stakeholders in the assessment and optimization of these systems to ensure consonance with clinical objects and nonsupervisory morals. This paper assesses the Electronic Health Record( EHR) system in a sanitorium, including usability, interoperability, and patient safety impact.
Nurses play important places in problem identification, making recommendations for change, and gravestone testing. Suggested conduct
Health technology systems should be estimated for enhancing the quality of care, safety for cases, and clinical effectiveness. Through usability evaluation, interoperability, and safety features, the nursers will be suitable to find areas for improvement and lobby for effective improvement. As technology advances further, the nursing leadership should lead the invention and ensure that megahit systems support both the clinicians and the cases.
| Criteria | Distinguished | Proficient | Basic |
| System Evaluation | Comprehensive assessment of usability, interoperability, safety, and workflow integration. | Addresses most evaluation areas, some details missing. | Limited or superficial assessment. |
| Impact on Patient Care | Clearly explains how EHR improves safety, quality, and workflow. | Some discussion of benefits lacks depth or examples. | Minimal or unclear connection to patient care. |
| Challenges & Barriers | Thorough analysis of barriers such as alert fatigue, training gaps, and system limitations. | Mentions barriers but lacks full analysis. | Barriers unclear or not addressed. |
| Nurse’s Role | Detailed explanation of nurse responsibilities in evaluation, advocacy, and improvement. | Roles mentioned but not fully explained. | Roles unclear or missing. |
| Recommendations | Provides actionable, evidence-based recommendations for system improvement. | Recommendations present but general. | Recommendations absent or vague. |
| Ethical & Legal Considerations | Considers HIPAA, security, and patient safety issues in-depth. | Some ethical/legal aspects addressed. | Minimal or missing discussion of ethics/security. |
Alert fatigue and documentation burden are the issues most frequently reported by nurses.
Nurses can report inefficiencies, participate in tests, and advocate for changes.
The most contemporary EHRs, analogous to Grand, are HIPAA compliant and retain rigorous encryption and access controls.
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