Literature DB >> 15528575

Where's the beef? The promise and the reality of clinical documentation.

Steven J Davidson1, Frank L Zwemer, Larry A Nathanson, Kenneth N Sable, Abu N G A Khan.   

Abstract

Physician-generated emergency department clinical documentation (information obtained from clinician observations and summarized decision processes inclusive of all manner of electronic systems capturing, storing, and presenting clinical documentation) serves four purposes: recording of medical care and communication among providers; payment for hospital and physician; legal defense from medical negligence allegations; and symptom/disease surveillance, public health, and research functions. In the consensus development process described by Handler, these objectives were balanced with the consideration of efficiency, often evaluated as physician time and clinical documentation system costs, in recording the information necessary for their accomplishment. The consensus panel session participants and authors recommend that 1) clinical documentation be electronically retrievable; 2) selection and implementation be evidence-based and grounded on valid metrics (research is needed to identify these metrics); 3) the user interface be crafted to promote clinical excellence through high-quality information collection and efficient charting techniques; 4) the priorities for integration of clinical information be standardized and implemented within enterprises and across health and information systems; 5) systems use accepted standards for bidirectional, real-time clinical data exchange, without limiting the location or number of simultaneous users; 6) systems fully utilize existing electronic sources of specific patient information and general medical knowledge; 7) systems automatically and reliably capture appropriate data that support electronic billing for emergency department services; and 8) systems promote bedside documentation and mobile access.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2004        PMID: 15528575     DOI: 10.1197/j.aem.2004.08.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acad Emerg Med        ISSN: 1069-6563            Impact factor:   3.451


  14 in total

1.  What are they trying to do?: An analysis of Action Identities in using electronic documentation in an EHR.

Authors:  Charlene R Weir; Catherine Staes; Stacey Slager; Teresa Taft; Valiammai Chidambaram; Heidi Kramer; Bruce E Bray; Seneca Perri Moore
Journal:  AMIA Annu Symp Proc       Date:  2018-04-16

2.  A qualitative analysis evaluating the purposes and practices of clinical documentation.

Authors:  Y-X Ho; C S Gadd; K L Kohorst; S T Rosenbloom
Journal:  Appl Clin Inform       Date:  2014-02-26       Impact factor: 2.342

3.  Incidence of speech recognition errors in the emergency department.

Authors:  Foster R Goss; Li Zhou; Scott G Weiner
Journal:  Int J Med Inform       Date:  2016-05-26       Impact factor: 4.046

4.  Getting the data right: information accuracy in pediatric emergency medicine.

Authors:  S C Porter; S F Manzi; D Volpe; A M Stack
Journal:  Qual Saf Health Care       Date:  2006-08

5.  Ethnographic analysis on the use of the electronic medical record for clinical handoff.

Authors:  Philippa Nelson; Anthony J Bell; Larry Nathanson; Leon D Sanchez; Jonathan Fisher; Philip D Anderson
Journal:  Intern Emerg Med       Date:  2016-11-10       Impact factor: 3.397

6.  Transition from paper to electronic inpatient physician notes.

Authors:  Thomas H Payne; Aharon E tenBroek; Grant S Fletcher; Mardi C Labuguen
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  2010 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 4.497

Review 7.  Evidence for handheld electronic medical records in improving care: a systematic review.

Authors:  Robert C Wu; Sharon E Straus
Journal:  BMC Med Inform Decis Mak       Date:  2006-06-20       Impact factor: 2.796

8.  Analysis and classification of oncology activities on the way to workflow based single source documentation in clinical information systems.

Authors:  Stefan Wagner; Matthias W Beckmann; Bernd Wullich; Christof Seggewies; Markus Ries; Thomas Bürkle; Hans-Ulrich Prokosch
Journal:  BMC Med Inform Decis Mak       Date:  2015-12-22       Impact factor: 2.796

9.  Strategies for improving physician documentation in the emergency department: a systematic review.

Authors:  Diane L Lorenzetti; Hude Quan; Kelsey Lucyk; Ceara Cunningham; Deirdre Hennessy; Jason Jiang; Cynthia A Beck
Journal:  BMC Emerg Med       Date:  2018-10-25

10.  Analysis of Errors in Dictated Clinical Documents Assisted by Speech Recognition Software and Professional Transcriptionists.

Authors:  Li Zhou; Suzanne V Blackley; Leigh Kowalski; Raymond Doan; Warren W Acker; Adam B Landman; Evgeni Kontrient; David Mack; Marie Meteer; David W Bates; Foster R Goss
Journal:  JAMA Netw Open       Date:  2018-07-06
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