Improving clinical documentation: introduction of electronic health records in paediatrics

Medical records are crucial facet of a patient’s journey. These provide the clinician with a permanent record of the patient’s illness and ongoing medical care, thus enabling informed clinical decisions. In many hospitals, patient medical records are written on paper. However, written notes are liab...

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Main Authors: Justin Koh, Mansoor Ahmed
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2021-03-01
Series:BMJ Open Quality
Online Access:https://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/10/1/e000918.full
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spelling doaj-8ce5f542e5c74ca0ba3f6914f980b62d2021-04-22T10:00:34ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Open Quality2399-66412021-03-0110110.1136/bmjoq-2020-000918Improving clinical documentation: introduction of electronic health records in paediatricsJustin Koh0Mansoor Ahmed1Department of Paediatrics, University Hospitals of Derby and Burton NHS Foundation Trust, Queen's Hospital, Belvedere Road, Burton Upon Trent, UKDepartment of Paediatrics, University Hospitals of Derby and Burton NHS Foundation Trust, Queen's Hospital, Belvedere Road, Burton Upon Trent, UKMedical records are crucial facet of a patient’s journey. These provide the clinician with a permanent record of the patient’s illness and ongoing medical care, thus enabling informed clinical decisions. In many hospitals, patient medical records are written on paper. However, written notes are liable to misinterpretation due to illegibility and misplacement. This can affect the patient’s medical care and has medico-legal implications. Electronic patient records (EPR) have been gradually introduced to replace patient’s paper notes with the aim of providing a more reliable record-keeping system. It is perceived that EPR improve the quality and efficiency of patient care. The paediatric department at Queen’s Hospital Burton uses a mix of paper notes and computerised medical records. Clinicians primarily use paper notes for admission clerking, ward rounds, ward reviews and outpatient clinic consultations. Laboratory tests, imaging results and prescription requests are executed via the EPR system. Documentation by nurses is also carried out electronically. We aimed to improve and standardise clinical documentation of paediatric admissions and ward round notes by developing electronic proforma for initial paediatric clerking, ward rounds and patient reviews. This quality improvement project improved clinical documentation on the paediatric wards and enhanced patient record-keeping, boosted clinical information-sharing and streamlined patient journey. It fulfilled various generic multidisciplinary record keeping audit tool standards endorsed by the Royal College of Physicians by 100%. We undertook a staff survey to investigate the opinion before and after implementing the electronic health record. Doctors, nurses and healthcare support workers overwhelmingly supported the quality, usefulness, completeness of specified fields and practicality of the electronic records.https://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/10/1/e000918.full
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Justin Koh
Mansoor Ahmed
spellingShingle Justin Koh
Mansoor Ahmed
Improving clinical documentation: introduction of electronic health records in paediatrics
BMJ Open Quality
author_facet Justin Koh
Mansoor Ahmed
author_sort Justin Koh
title Improving clinical documentation: introduction of electronic health records in paediatrics
title_short Improving clinical documentation: introduction of electronic health records in paediatrics
title_full Improving clinical documentation: introduction of electronic health records in paediatrics
title_fullStr Improving clinical documentation: introduction of electronic health records in paediatrics
title_full_unstemmed Improving clinical documentation: introduction of electronic health records in paediatrics
title_sort improving clinical documentation: introduction of electronic health records in paediatrics
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
series BMJ Open Quality
issn 2399-6641
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Medical records are crucial facet of a patient’s journey. These provide the clinician with a permanent record of the patient’s illness and ongoing medical care, thus enabling informed clinical decisions. In many hospitals, patient medical records are written on paper. However, written notes are liable to misinterpretation due to illegibility and misplacement. This can affect the patient’s medical care and has medico-legal implications. Electronic patient records (EPR) have been gradually introduced to replace patient’s paper notes with the aim of providing a more reliable record-keeping system. It is perceived that EPR improve the quality and efficiency of patient care. The paediatric department at Queen’s Hospital Burton uses a mix of paper notes and computerised medical records. Clinicians primarily use paper notes for admission clerking, ward rounds, ward reviews and outpatient clinic consultations. Laboratory tests, imaging results and prescription requests are executed via the EPR system. Documentation by nurses is also carried out electronically. We aimed to improve and standardise clinical documentation of paediatric admissions and ward round notes by developing electronic proforma for initial paediatric clerking, ward rounds and patient reviews. This quality improvement project improved clinical documentation on the paediatric wards and enhanced patient record-keeping, boosted clinical information-sharing and streamlined patient journey. It fulfilled various generic multidisciplinary record keeping audit tool standards endorsed by the Royal College of Physicians by 100%. We undertook a staff survey to investigate the opinion before and after implementing the electronic health record. Doctors, nurses and healthcare support workers overwhelmingly supported the quality, usefulness, completeness of specified fields and practicality of the electronic records.
url https://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/10/1/e000918.full
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