Literature DB >> 29107565

Rubber stamp templates for improving clinical documentation: A paper-based, m-Health approach for quality improvement in low-resource settings.

Bernadette Kleczka1, Anita Musiega2, Grace Rabut3, Phoebe Wekesa2, Paul Mwaniki4, Michael Marx5, Pratap Kumar6.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The United Nations' Sustainable Development Goal #3.8 targets 'access to quality essential healthcare services'. Clinical practice guidelines are an important tool for ensuring quality of clinical care, but many challenges prevent their use in low-resource settings. Monitoring the use of guidelines relies on cumbersome clinical audits of paper records, and electronic systems face financial and other limitations. Here we describe a unique approach to generating digital data from paper using guideline-based templates, rubber stamps and mobile phones. INTERVENTION: The Guidelines Adherence in Slums Project targeted ten private sector primary healthcare clinics serving informal settlements in Nairobi, Kenya. Each clinic was provided with rubber stamp templates to support documentation and management of commonly encountered outpatient conditions. Participatory design methods were used to customize templates to the workflows and infrastructure of each clinic. Rubber stamps were used to print templates into paper charts, providing clinicians with checklists for use during consultations. Templates used bubble format data entry, which could be digitized from images taken on mobile phones. Besides rubber stamp templates, the intervention included booklets of guideline compilations, one Android phone for digitizing images of templates, and one data feedback/continuing medical education session per clinic each month. In this paper we focus on the effect of the intervention on documentation of three non-communicable diseases in one clinic.
METHODS: Seventy charts of patients enrolled in the chronic disease program (hypertension/diabetes, n=867; chronic respiratory diseases, n=223) at one of the ten intervention clinics were sampled. Documentation of each individual patient encounter in the pre-intervention (January-March 2016) and post-intervention period (May-July) was scored for information in four dimensions - general data, patient assessment, testing, and management. Control criteria included information with no counterparts in templates (e.g. notes on presenting complaints, vital signs). Documentation scores for each patient were compared between both pre- and post-intervention periods and between encounters documented with and without templates (post-intervention only).
RESULTS: The total number of patient encounters in the pre-intervention (282) and post-intervention periods (264) did not differ. Mean documentation scores increased significantly in the post-intervention period on average by 21%, 24% and 17% for hypertension, diabetes and chronic respiratory diseases, respectively. Differences were greater (47%, 43% and 27%, respectively) when documentation with and without templates was compared. Changes between pre- vs.post-intervention, and with vs.without template, varied between individual dimensions of documentation. Overall, documentation improved more for general data and patient assessment than in testing or management.
CONCLUSION: The use of templates improves paper-based documentation of patient care, a first step towards improving the quality of care. Rubber stamps provide a simple and low-cost method to print templates on demand. In combination with ubiquitously available mobile phones, information entered on paper can be easily and rapidly digitized. This 'frugal innovation' in m-Health can empower small, private sector facilities, where large numbers of urban patients seek healthcare, to generate digital data on routine outpatient care. These data can form the basis for evidence-based quality improvement efforts at large scale, and help deliver on the SDG promise of quality essential healthcare services for all.
Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Clinical practice guideline; Frugal innovation; Non-physician clinician; Rubber stamp template; m-Health

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29107565      PMCID: PMC6997026          DOI: 10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2017.10.014

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Med Inform        ISSN: 1386-5056            Impact factor:   4.046


  37 in total

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6.  Evaluating the impact of structured text and templates in ambulatory nursing.

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Review 7.  Mobile-health: A review of current state in 2015.

Authors:  Bruno M C Silva; Joel J P C Rodrigues; Isabel de la Torre Díez; Miguel López-Coronado; Kashif Saleem
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8.  Using touchscreen electronic medical record systems to support and monitor national scale-up of antiretroviral therapy in Malawi.

Authors:  Gerald P Douglas; Oliver J Gadabu; Sabine Joukes; Soyapi Mumba; Michael V McKay; Anne Ben-Smith; Andreas Jahn; Erik J Schouten; Zach Landis Lewis; Joep J van Oosterhout; Theresa J Allain; Rony Zachariah; Selma D Berger; Anthony D Harries; Frank Chimbwandira
Journal:  PLoS Med       Date:  2010-08-10       Impact factor: 11.069

9.  Barriers to using eHealth data for clinical performance feedback in Malawi: A case study.

Authors:  Zach Landis-Lewis; Ronald Manjomo; Oliver J Gadabu; Matthew Kam; Bertha N Simwaka; Susan L Zickmund; Frank Chimbwandira; Gerald P Douglas; Rebecca S Jacobson
Journal:  Int J Med Inform       Date:  2015-07-19       Impact factor: 4.046

10.  Comprehensive evaluation of electronic medical record system use and user satisfaction at five low-resource setting hospitals in ethiopia.

Authors:  Binyam Tilahun; Fleur Fritz
Journal:  JMIR Med Inform       Date:  2015-05-25
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2.  Using rubber stamps and mobile phones to help understand and change antibiotic prescribing behaviour in private sector primary healthcare clinics in Kenya.

Authors:  Bernadette Kleczka; Pratap Kumar; Mercy Karimi Njeru; Anita Musiega; Phoebe Wekesa; Grace Rabut; Michael Marx
Journal:  BMJ Glob Health       Date:  2019-09-29

3.  Use of technology to prevent, detect, manage and control hypertension in sub-Saharan Africa: a systematic review.

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5.  Implementation barriers for mHealth for non-communicable diseases management in low and middle income countries: a scoping review and field-based views from implementers.

Authors:  Josefien van Olmen; Erica Erwin; Ana Cristina García-Ulloa; Bruno Meessen; J Jaime Miranda; Kirsty Bobrow; Juliet Iwelunmore; Ucheoma Nwaozuru; Chisom Obiezu Umeh; Carter Smith; Chris Harding; Pratap Kumar; Clicerio Gonzales; Sergio Hernández-Jiménez; Karen Yeates
Journal:  Wellcome Open Res       Date:  2020-04-16

Review 6.  Effectiveness and perceptions of using templates in long-term condition reviews: a systematic synthesis of quantitative and qualitative studies.

Authors:  Mary Morrissey; Elizabeth Shepherd; Emma Kinley; Kirstie McClatchey; Hilary Pinnock
Journal:  Br J Gen Pract       Date:  2021-08-26       Impact factor: 6.302

  6 in total

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