27.07.2023

EPR – Training Needs Analysis – Getting it Right, First Time

A Training Needs Analysis (TNA) is a critical step in the successful implementation of a new Electronic Patient Record (EPR) system. TNA’s identify the knowledge, skills, and abilities required to use the EPR system effectively and efficiently. By understanding the training needs of staff, organisations can design and deliver targeted, comprehensive training programmes that ensure smooth adoption of the new system. This paper describes a gold standard approach to conducting a TNA for a new EPR system.

  1. Define the objectives and scope of the EPR system: Begin by establishing a clear understanding of the EPR system’s objectives and scope. Determine the specific functionalities, workflows, and processes that the new system will introduce or change. Understanding the system’s goals and capabilities will help identify the required knowledge, skills, and abilities for each staff member.
  2. Identify and segment target audience: Determine the different staff roles and levels that will interact with the EPR system, such as Consultants, Junior Doctors, Nurses, Allied Health professionals, administrative staff, and Management. It is crucial to understand the many and varied types of each role that exist and to understand which of these variations need separate, bespoke training sessions (and therefore lesson plans). Then you can Segment the target audience into distinct groups based on their roles, responsibilities, and interactions with the EPR system. This will enable the development of role specific training programmes that address the unique needs of each group.
  3. Conduct a gap analysis: Assess the current knowledge, skills, and abilities of the target audience in relation to the new EPR system. This can be achieved through various methods, including surveys and interviews as well as understanding the Current State v Future State processes and workflow for each group. Identify gaps between the current and required competencies and prioritise the training needs. It is also critical to the success of the programme to understand both the basic computer literacy within your organisation as well as understanding the digital literacy that exists. It is important to understand the difference between these (which will be addressed in an upcoming article).
  4. Engage key stakeholders: Involve key stakeholders, such as management, IT staff, and end-users, in the TNA process. Their insights and perspectives will help ensure that the analysis is comprehensive and accurately reflects the organisation’s needs. Collaboration is key, especially when understanding future state workflow for each staff group identified. To this end it is important to liaise with the Business Change team who should communicate all the current and future state processes to the training workstream.
  5. Develop competency framework: Create a competency framework that outlines the specific knowledge, skills, and abilities required for each staff role in relation to the EPR system. The framework should include tasks related to data entry and system navigation.
  6. Determine appropriate training methods and resources: Based on the identified training needs and competency framework, determine the most suitable training methods and resources for each target group. Consider a blend of training formats, such as classroom-based instruction, online modules, hands-on workshops, and simulation exercises in an experience centre, to accommodate various learning styles and preferences. Again, collaboration is key here. Listen to the target audience and management teams. They often know what works best for their staff when completing training.
  7. Establish a training evaluation plan: Develop a plan to evaluate the effectiveness of the training programs in addressing the identified needs. This should include both formative evaluations, conducted during the training process, and summative evaluations, conducted after training completion. The evaluation plan should outline the specific criteria and methods for measuring the success of the training, such as knowledge assessments, skill demonstrations, and feedback surveys.
  8. Implement and iterate: Execute the training programmes based on the TNA findings and continuously assess their effectiveness. Use the evaluation results to identify areas for improvement and refine the training content, methods, and delivery as needed. It is important for this information to be understood when handing over and transitioning to business as usual, in a post go-live environment.

Conclusion

A gold standard approach to Training Needs Analysis is essential for the successful implementation of a new Electronic Patient Record system. By thoroughly understanding the training needs of staff, organisations can develop targeted, comprehensive training programs that ensure the smooth adoption as well as safe and effective use of the new system. This approach, coupled with ongoing evaluation and refinement, will result in increased efficiency, improved patient care, and enhanced overall outcomes for healthcare organisations.

Latest insights

Marginal Gains Could Save Lives: What the NHS Learned from Formula 1

Across the NHS, hospitals are facing increasing pressure not only from rising patient demand, but from the growing complexity of delivering safe, efficient care within constrained operational environments. Theatre capacity, staffing shortages and delayed patient flow are all placing systems under strain, where even small inefficiencies can have significant consequences.  Minutes lost during patient handovers,…

AI in Higher Education: What’s Actually Changing?

There has been a noticeable rise in conversations around AI roles across Higher Education over the past year. Universities are increasingly hiring for AI specialists, data leaders, automation experts, and digital transformation professionals. But despite the recent attention, AI itself is not new to the sector. In reality, many of the technologies and skillsets now…

Saving Pennies Now Could Cost You Pounds Later: Why Data Should Drive Decision Making

Across the UK and internationally, ambulance, police and fire services are facing increasing pressures not only from rising demand, but from a quieter and more structural issue: vehicle availability. With c.8-10% of public sector fleets off the road at any given time, a growing proportion are ageing beyond their optimal operational life, leading to more…

Optimising Records Management: A Conversation with Harry Pettet

Reflecting on my time at Rewired, the opportunities that can be achieved by the NHS from maximising frontline productivity (FP) are increasingly clear to me. In line with the FP programme mandate, I saw a clear shift in focus from EPR roll-out to instead a wider scope which included championing digital enablement and adoption via…

Paperless? Not Without Paper First.

Sitting at my 200-year-old desk, checking a 120-year-old pocket watch, and recapping a century-old fountain pen, while dictating this into my phone and letting AI help shape it into a blog. The irony isn’t lost on me. Just before writing this, I spoke to someone who’s spent years focused on the problem, not the solution….

From Big Pharma to the Public Sector: Why I Made the Shift

Career changes are rarely about chasing a new title. For me, the move from big pharma into the public sector was about aligning my skills with work that has a more direct impact on people’s lives. For several years, I worked in the private sector supporting global clinical trials by overseeing translations of electronic clinical…

You Can’t Merge What You Can’t Measure: Safe and Legal Day 1 Starts With Data

I remember the sinking feeling clearly. I was working from my home office when my builder knocked on the door and asked if he could have “a quick word.” That phrase never means good news. He’d discovered another asbestos pipe—hidden behind a wall we’d already opened up. The bathroom renovation was delayed again. Costs climbed….

If Your CIO Isn’t at the Executive Table, Your University Is Taking a Risk

Universities don’t fail because their technology breaks. They fail because their strategy ignores technology until it’s too late.  For years, Higher Education has treated IT as a delivery function – something to be consulted once the “real” decisions have been made. That mindset is now actively dangerous.  In today’s sector, digital strategy is institutional strategy. And any university that doesn’t have its CIO at the executive…

Fail Fast, Serve Better: Why the Public Sector Needs a Hackathon Mindset

The electricity in the room was palpable. You could feel that surge of anticipation and excitement — the moment when your brain starts racing at 100 miles an hour and the ideas begin to spill out. We were only ten minutes into our first ever Keystream Hackathon, and already the ideas were coming so fast…

Who Owns the Roof Over Our Heads? And why it matters

Generation Alpha – the iPad-native, AI-normal, children of Millennials who think global videos, climate chat, and hand sanitiser are just… life.  They’re also the least likely generation to ever own their own home. As it stands many Millennial parents will not get to see their children own their own home.  That matters. As property ownership…