An effective electronic health record implementation requires oodles of collaboration among every slice and silo of the organization. Ideally such collaboration would be a given. But all staff members are human beings who tend to develop identities and loyalties based in shared relationships and experiences. In other words, locally. Enter turf as a perennial resistance to the change that comes with the move to an EHR.

At the time of our EMR implementation, my home organization had been in operation for more than 25 years. Many of the staff had been there for > 10 years. Place and people already had a long history together.

Factional divisions were plentiful; blaming the other was usual.  Many staff groups believed that their function was the crucial operation and that other functions existed to service their operation's needs.  There were adversarial relationships between programs.  For example, Inpatient staff thought a hospitalization was central to the treatment and that they could more properly diagnose and treat a patient based on their 24/7 observation. Outpatient staff, meanwhile, believed a hospitalization was a disruption in care and that they better understood the patient because of long-term contact in the natural setting.  Then there were fiscal staff who thought clinicians were too lazy to do correct documentation for billing, while clinical staff saw fiscal staff as lacking compassion. … and on and on. I’m sure there are 100’s of choice examples out there.

So what to do?  My condensed answer is to get them in a room together, give them a task and a strict timeline and tell them they must be successful.  Details to follow.