The Impact of Health Information Technology and e-Health on the Future Demand for Physician Services

Synopsis

Health information technology and electronic health applications will likely change the shape of the health care workforce, by raising efficiency; allowing more patient care to be provided by physician assistants and nurse practitioners, and by generalist rather than specialist physicians; and by increasing the opportunity for patients to receive care remotely. These trends will considerably decrease demand on physicians’ time.

The Issue

Most health policy analysts predict there will soon be a shortage of primary care physicians, with demand for health services driven by an aging population and Americans gaining insurance coverage through the Affordable Care Act. At the same time, health information technology (HIT) is causing major changes throughout the health care system. As of 2009, as many as 72 percent of office-based physicians had an electronic health record (EHR), up from only about 10 percent a decade ago. Other electronic tools—like secure messaging with patients or clinical decision support—are being adopted more slowly. Authors Jonathan Weiner and Susan Yeh of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and David Blumenthal, president of The Commonwealth Fund, reviewed the research literature to understand how the implementation of HIT, as well as electronic health and mobile health applications, might affect future demand for physicians.

Key Findings

  • If a range of health information technologies were to be fully implemented in 30 percent of community-based physicians’ offices (including interoperable EHRs, clinical decision support, provider order entry, and patient web portals with secure messaging), demand for physicians would be reduced by about 4 percent to 9 percent through gains in efficiency.
  • Delegating more care to nurse practitioners and physician assistants could, if accompanied by HIT support, reduce demand for physicians by 4 percent to 7 percent. Similarly, if generalist physicians provided more of the care now being provided by specialists, demand for specialists would decline by 2 percent to 5 percent.
  • Use of HIT could also help address regional shortages of physicians, by allowing 12 percent of care to be delivered remotely or asynchronously—that is, through visits conducted in separate locations and at different points in time.
  • These estimated impacts could more than double if comprehensive HIT systems were fully implemented by 70 percent of community-based physicians.
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