Background: Electronic Health Records (EHRs) are increasingly adopted worldwide, but evidence of their effects on medication dispensing efficiency is limited, particularly in non-Western healthcare settings. The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of an EHR system on medication dispensing time in a hospital pharmacy in Saudi Arabia.
Methods: A quasi-experimental pre-post study design was used to compare medication dispensing times before and after EHR implementation across seven inpatient departments in Buraydah Central Hospital. Timestamp data on 5,110 medication dispensing instances were extracted from the pharmacy records.
Results: EHR implementation led to statistically significant reductions in overall mean dispensing times (by 25.8%, from 90.9 minutes to 67.5 minutes, p<0.001) and within each department (by 16.3% – 49.1%, p<0.001).
Conclusion: This study provides quantitative evidence that introducing the use of EHRs substantially improved the medication dispensing efficiency in a Saudi Arabian hospital pharmacy. Further research should assess the long-term impacts of the use of EHRs across multiple sites.
HTML PDFShare this article
Journal of Health & Medical Informatics received 2128 citations as per Google Scholar report