EHR training that integrates workflow is role-based and scenario-driven , meaning it teaches end users how to perform their real clinical tasks in the system in the same sequence, context, and timing they experience in practice. This approach emphasizes end-to-end processes (handoffs, ordering, documentation, medication administration, discharge) rather than isolated features or generic navigation. The example that best reflects workflow-integrated training is the ICU nurse reviewing Emergency Department patient handover reports , because it mirrors a common, time-sensitive clinical transition of care. In this scenario, the nurse must locate the correct patient, review ED documentation, reconcile current status and interventions, confirm orders, and prepare for ongoing ICU management—steps that directly match actual bedside workflow and support safe continuity of care.
Option A focuses on troubleshooting system error messages, which is more technical than workflow training. Option B relates to governance and access control decision-making, not frontline EHR workflow use. Option D (evaluating medication errors) is primarily a quality/safety analysis activity; while important, it does not clearly represent a hands-on EHR workflow task sequence for routine care delivery. Workflow-integrated training improves adoption, efficiency, and patient safety because users practice exactly how the EHR supports their daily work.