Source

National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) National Ambulatory Care Survey (2004-2011) and National Electronic Health Record Survey (2012-present)

Citation

Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology. 'Office-based Physician Electronic Health Record Adoption,' Health IT Quick-Stat #50. https://www.healthit.gov/data/quickstats/office-based-physician-electronic-health-record-adoption.

As of 2021, nearly 9 in 10 (88%) of U.S. office-based physicians adopted any electronic health record (EHR)[2], and nearly 4 in 5 (78%) had adopted a certified EHR[4]. This is a consistent trend since 2015. Since 2008, office-based physician adoption of any EHRs has more than doubled, from 42% to 88%. Since ONC and the CDC began tracking it in 2014, the percent of office-based physicians that adopted a certified EHR increased from 74% to 78%

Year Any EHR Basic EHR Certified EHR
2004 20.8% -- --
2005 23.9% -- --
2006 29.2% 10.5% --
2007 34.8% 11.8% --
2008 42.0% 16.9% --
2009 48.3% 11.8% --
2010 51.0% 27.9% --
2011 57.0% 33.9% --
2012 71.8% 39.6% --
2013 78.4% 48.1% --
2014 82.8% 50.5% 74.0%
2015 86.9% 53.9% 77.9%
2016 86.9% -- 77.0%
2017 85.9% -- 79.7%
2018 92.1% -- 78.7%
2019 90.0% -- 72.0%
2021 88.0% -- 78.0%
  1. Physicians adopted a Basic EHR if they reported their practice performed all of the following computerized functions: patient demographics, patient problem lists, electronic lists of medications taken by patients, clinician notes, orders for medications, viewing laboratory results, and viewing imaging results. The core capabilities of a Basic EHR were defined by DesRoches, et al. in the 2008 manuscript.
  2. Any EHR system is a medical or health record system that is either all or partially electronic, and excludes systems solely for billing.
  3. Data include non-federal, office-based physicians, and exclude radiologists, anesthesiologists, and pathologists.
  4. A certified EHR system is one that meets the requirements adopted by the US Department of Health and Human Services.