Clinical workflows & CPOE
How an intention — 'start this antibiotic' — becomes a safe, tracked, acted-on order. Computerised Provider Order Entry is where clinical informatics succeeds or fails most visibly.
In one line
CPOE (Computerised Provider Order Entry) lets a clinician enter orders — medications, labs, imaging, referrals — directly into the system, where they can be checked, routed and tracked, instead of on paper or by verbal relay. The workflow around it decides whether that makes care safer or just faster to make mistakes.
Why CPOE matters for safety
Paper and verbal orders lose legibility, allergy checks and an audit trail. CPOE makes the order structured and computable, so clinical decision support can run at the moment of ordering: dose range, drug–drug and allergy interactions, duplicate therapy, and required indications. Done well, it prevents a class of errors paper never could.
Order sets and workflow design
The real craft is the workflow: order sets (a pre-built bundle for "community-acquired pneumonia"), sensible defaults, and routing so pharmacy, nursing and the lab each get what they need without re-keying. This is where nursing informatics and the EHR build meet the bedside.
Watch for — new errors CPOE can introduce
CPOE removes handwriting errors but adds its own: wrong-patient entries (two charts open), pick-list slips (adjacent drug selected), alert fatigue dismissing the critical warning, and rigid order sets applied to the wrong patient. Safe CPOE pairs the technology with workflow design, patient-context safeguards, and sparing, specific alerts — not just digitising the paper.