The short answer to the title question is: everywhere. One definition of corporate culture is "How we do things around here.” It is the collective behavior of people using common corporate vision, goals, shared values, beliefs, habits, working language, systems, and symbols. It is interwoven with processes, technologies, and learning. A successful EMR implementation necessarily impacts all these domains.

In the late 90’s my home organization, UBHC, was being transformed from a community mental health center to a managed care oriented corporation. This meant a dramatic change in corporate culture. An electronic health record was at the heart of this transformation. Here are some examples. Professional identity would be challenged as appointment schedules became centralized and electronic. Clinical information would become more standardized and monitored. Communication would move away from face-to-face, often group settings to electronic methods. There was new attention given to productivity and efficiency. The financial needs of the organization were now a necessary and valid priority, which required all staff’s participation.  Fiscal staff needed to respect the work of the clinician as the source of revenues and clinical staff needed to contribute in the effort to successfully bill services.

The EHR implementation itself became the main vehicle of this cultural change.  Leadership and inclusive process were the key elements. These will be the focus of future blogs.

Also among the clinicians an apt, tongue-in-cheek phrase emerged: “Psychotherapy begins at home.” By this they meant that the frequent psychotherapy themes of recognizing and adapting to change had now become their own challenge. It told a truth that was clarifying, but uncomfortable.