%0 Journal Article %T Comparison of user groups' perspectives of barriers and facilitators to implementing electronic health records: a systematic review %A Carrie McGinn %A Sonya Grenier %A Julie Duplantie %A Nicola Shaw %A Claude Sicotte %A Luc Mathieu %A Yvan Leduc %A France L¨¦gar¨¦ %A Marie-Pierre Gagnon %J BMC Medicine %D 2011 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1741-7015-9-46 %X Covering a period from 1999 to 2009, a literature search was conducted on nine electronic databases. Studies were included if they reported on users' perceived barriers and facilitators to shared EHR implementation, in healthcare settings comparable to Canada. Studies in all languages with an empirical study design were included. Quality and relevance of the studies were assessed. Four EHR user groups were targeted: physicians, other health care professionals, managers, and patients/public. Content analysis was performed independently by two authors using a validated extraction grid with pre-established categorization of barriers and facilitators for each group of EHR users.Of a total of 5,695 potentially relevant publications identified, 117 full text publications were obtained after screening titles and abstracts. After review of the full articles, 60 publications, corresponding to 52 studies, met the inclusion criteria. The most frequent adoption factors common to all user groups were design and technical concerns, ease of use, interoperability, privacy and security, costs, productivity, familiarity and ability with EHR, motivation to use EHR, patient and health professional interaction, and lack of time and workload. Each user group also identified factors specific to their professional and individual priorities.This systematic review presents innovative research on the barriers and facilitators to EHR implementation. While important similarities between user groups are highlighted, differences between them demonstrate that each user group also has a unique perspective of the implementation process that should be taken into account.An interoperable electronic health record (EHR) is defined as a secure and private electronic lifetime record of an individual's key health history and care within the health system [1]. This record is available electronically to authorized health providers and the individual anywhere, anytime in support of high quality care. This rec %U http://www.biomedcentral.com/1741-7015/9/46