Improving Folic Acid Supplementation Through Electronic Medical Record Interface Modifications—A Retrospective Study
Dina Litvak, Eugene Merzon, Yotam Shenhar, Ilan Green, Shlomo Vinker, Ariel Israel, Avivit Golan Cohen

TL;DR
Modifying electronic medical record interfaces increased folic acid testing and supplement use among women of reproductive age, improving preventive care.
Contribution
Demonstrates that digital interface changes in medical records can effectively boost preventive health behaviors.
Findings
Testing rates increased from 14.74% to 17.35% after interface modifications.
Deficiency detection improved from 6.30% to 7.38% post-intervention.
Supplement consumption tripled from 5.45% to 15.98%, with most users being new.
Abstract
Background: Folic acid is essential for DNA synthesis and fetal development, with deficiency linked to anemia, cardiovascular disease and pregnancy complications. The clinical guidelines for women of reproductive age mandate supplementation as a universal preventive treatment regardless of blood folic acid levels; therefore, routine folic acid level testing is not recommended for this population. However, the vast majority of pregnant women do not implement the recommended preventive actions, indicating that new strategies are needed to improve that situation. Objectives: This study examined the impact of modifying the laboratory test-ordering interface in the medical record system, designed to simplify the ordering of folic acid level tests, on testing rates, deficiency detection and supplement consumption among women of reproductive age. Methods: This retrospective cohort analysis…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFolate and B Vitamins Research · Esophageal and GI Pathology · Oral and gingival health research
