| Literature DB >> 27496045 |
Melissa Gomes1, Pamela Hash, Liana Orsolini, Aimee Watkins, Andrea Mazzoccoli.
Abstract
The purpose of this research is to determine the effects of implementing an electronic health record on medical-surgical registered nurses' time spent in direct professional patient-centered nursing activities, attitudes and beliefs related to implementation, and changes in level of nursing engagement after deployment of the electronic health record. Patient-centered activities were categorized using Watson's Caritas Processes and the Relationship-Based Care Delivery System. Methods included use of an Attitudes and Beliefs Assessment Questionnaire, Nursing Engagement Questionnaire, and Rapid Modeling Corporation's personal digital assistants for time and motion data collection. There was a significant difference in normative belief between nurses with less than 15 years' experience and nurses with more than 15 years' experience (t21 = 2.7, P = .01). While nurses spent less time at the nurses' station, less time charting, significantly more time in patients' rooms and in purposeful interactions, time spent in relationship-based caring behavior categories actually decreased in most categories. Nurses' engagement scores did not significantly increase. These results serve to inform healthcare organizations about potential factors related to electronic health record deployment which create shifts in nursing time spent across care categories and can be used to explore further patient centered care practices.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27496045 PMCID: PMC5145246 DOI: 10.1097/CIN.0000000000000280
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Comput Inform Nurs ISSN: 1538-2931 Impact factor: 1.985
Watson's 10 Caritas Processes
FIGURE 1Components of a relationship-based care delivery system for a relationship-based care model.
ANA's Essentials of Contemporary Professional Nursing Practice
PDA Categories
Mean Values Across Groups for EHR Values and Beliefs
FIGURE 2Comparing time spent in a 3-day period before EMR implementation with a 3-day period 6 months after EMR implementation ranked by percentage change.
FIGURE 3Comparing time spent in a 3-day period before EMR implementation with a 3-day period 6 months after EMR implementation ranked by percentage change in all activities.