Published on in Vol 9, No 9 (2021): September

Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/29374, first published .
Using a New Model of Electronic Health Record Training to Reduce Physician Burnout: A Plan for Action

Using a New Model of Electronic Health Record Training to Reduce Physician Burnout: A Plan for Action

Using a New Model of Electronic Health Record Training to Reduce Physician Burnout: A Plan for Action

Authors of this article:

Vishnu Mohan 1 Author Orcid Image ;   Cort Garrison 1 Author Orcid Image ;   Jeffrey A Gold 2 Author Orcid Image

Journals

  1. Nikolian V, Stowers J, Brasel K. Technology and Surgical Training—Friend or Foe?. JAMA Surgery 2022;157(7):561 View
  2. Jin D, Samuel S, Bowden K, Mohan V, Gold J. Just-in-Time Electronic Health Record Retraining to Support Clinician Redeployment during the COVID-19 Surge. Applied Clinical Informatics 2022;13(05):949 View
  3. Li D, Hu Y, Liu S, Lu C, Li J, Zhou J, Zhang Y, Lu S. A Latent Profile Analysis of Chinese Physicians' Workload Tethered to Paperwork During Outpatient Encounters. Frontiers in Public Health 2022;10 View
  4. Rajamani G, Diethelm M, Gunderson M, Talluri V, Motz P, Steinhaus J, LaFlamme A, Jarabek B, Christiaansen T, Blade J, Badlani S, Melton G. Crowdsourcing Electronic Health Record Improvements at Scale across an Integrated Health Care Delivery System. Applied Clinical Informatics 2023;14(02):356 View
  5. Rangel J, Humphrey‐Murto S. Social Studies of Science and Technology: New ways to illuminate challenges in training for health information technologies utilisation. Medical Education 2023 View
  6. Qualey R. Documenting Perioperative Care in the Electronic Health Record. AORN Journal 2023;118(4):261 View
  7. Kobeissi M. Enhancing Simulation: A Roadmap for Integrating the Electronic Health Record into the Nurse Practitioner Curriculum. Clinical Simulation in Nursing 2023;85:101460 View