The Rourke Baby Record Infant/Child Maintenance Guide: do doctors use it, do they find it useful, and does using it improve their well-baby visit records?

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The Rourke Baby Record (RBR) – <url>http://www.rourkebabyrecord.ca</url> – is a freely available evidence-based structured form for child health surveillance from zero to five years. Family physicians/general practitioner...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Pearce Sarah, Rourke James, Godwin Marshall, Rourke Leslie, Bean Joyce
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2009-04-01
Series:BMC Family Practice
Online Access:http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2296/10/28
Description
Summary:<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The Rourke Baby Record (RBR) – <url>http://www.rourkebabyrecord.ca</url> – is a freely available evidence-based structured form for child health surveillance from zero to five years. Family physicians/general practitioners (FP/GPs) doing office based well-baby care in three Ontario Canada cities (London, Ottawa, and Toronto) were randomly sampled to study the prevalence and utility of the RBR and documentation of well-baby visits.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Database with telephone confirmation was conducted to assess the prevalence of use of the RBR.</p> <p>Study Part 1: Questionnaire mailed to a random sample of 100 RBR users. Outcome measures were utility of, helpfulness of, and suggestions for the RBR. Descriptive analysis was employed.</p> <p>Study Part 2: Retrospective chart review of well-baby visits by 38 FP/GPs using student t-tests and factor analysis. Outcome measures were well-baby visit documentation of growth, nutrition, safety issues, developmental milestones, physical examination, and overall comprehensiveness.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The RBR was used by 78.5% (402/512) of successfully contacted FP/GPs who did well-baby care in these 3 cities.</p> <p>Study Part 1: Questionnaire respondents (N = 41/100) used the RBR in several ways, and found it most helpful for assessing healthy child development, charting/recording the visits, managing time effectively, addressing parent concerns, identifying health problems, and identifying high risk situations. The RBR was seen to be least helpful as a tool for managing or for referring identified health problems.</p> <p>Study Part 2: Charts from a total of 1,378 well-baby visits on 176 children were audited. Well-baby care provided by the 20 FP/GPs who used the RBR compared to that by the 18 non-users was statistically more likely to include documentation of type of feeding (p = 0.023), discussion of safety issues (p < 0.001), assessment of development (p = 0.001), and overall comprehensiveness (p < 0.001). Well-baby care provided by the RBR users compared to that by the non-users was not more likely to include documentation of measurement of growth (p = 0.097), or physical examination (p = 0.828).</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The RBR was widely used by FP/GPs in these settings. RBR users found it helpful for many purposes, and had a consistently high rate of documentation of many aspects of well-baby care. The Rourke Baby Record has become a de facto gold standard clinical practice tool in knowledge translation for pediatric preventive medicine and health surveillance for primary care pediatric providers.</p>
ISSN:1471-2296