Literature DB >> 30970382

Electronic Health Record Documentation Patterns of Recorded Primary Care Visits Focused on Complex Communication: A Qualitative Study.

Laura Prater1, Anthony Sanchez2, Gabriella Modan3, Jennifer Burgess3, Kim Frier4, Nathan Richards3, Seuli Bose-Brill1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In a time-constrained clinical environment, physicians cannot feasibly document all aspects of an office visit in the electronic health record (EHR). This is especially true for patients with multiple chronic conditions requiring complex clinical reasoning. It is unclear how physicians prioritize the documentation of health information in the EHR.
OBJECTIVE: The goal of this study is to examine documentation tradeoffs made by physicians when caring for complex patients by comparing the content of office visit conversations with resulting EHR documentation.
METHODS: We used grounded theory method of qualitative analysis to assess emergent themes in the transcripts of 10 office visits, and then compared the themes to documentation in the EHR. Differences between discussion and subsequent documentation of social and emotional health topics and each of the other key categories were compared using the Wilcoxon signed-rank test.
RESULTS: The categories that emerged included "chronic conditions," "acute/new problems," "disease prevention," and "social and emotional health." We found that when social and emotional topics were discussed in the office visit, it was documented in the medical record only 30.6% of the time. Chronic conditions, acute/new problems, and disease prevention were documented in the EHR between 87.5 and 91.7% of the time after discussion. The differences between discussion and documentation of social and emotional topics were significantly greater than the differences for chronic conditions, acute/new problems, and disease prevention (all p < 0.05).
CONCLUSION: Social and emotional factors, while extremely relevant to health management, are less likely than medical concerns to be documented after discussion in an office visit. This lack of documentation may hinder interdisciplinary communication between teams informing individualized therapeutic decisions during acute care handoffs, such as outpatient to inpatient care. Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.

Entities:  

Year:  2019        PMID: 30970382      PMCID: PMC6458018          DOI: 10.1055/s-0039-1683986

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Appl Clin Inform        ISSN: 1869-0327            Impact factor:   2.342


  38 in total

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8.  A cost-benefit analysis of electronic medical records in primary care.

Authors:  Samuel J Wang; Blackford Middleton; Lisa A Prosser; Christiana G Bardon; Cynthia D Spurr; Patricia J Carchidi; Anne F Kittler; Robert C Goldszer; David G Fairchild; Andrew J Sussman; Gilad J Kuperman; David W Bates
Journal:  Am J Med       Date:  2003-04-01       Impact factor: 4.965

9.  Physicians' perceptions of the impact of the EHR on the collection and retrieval of psychosocial information in outpatient diabetes care.

Authors:  Charles Senteio; Tiffany Veinot; Julia Adler-Milstein; Caroline Richardson
Journal:  Int J Med Inform       Date:  2018-02-21       Impact factor: 4.046

10.  Epidemiology of multimorbidity and implications for health care, research, and medical education: a cross-sectional study.

Authors:  Karen Barnett; Stewart W Mercer; Michael Norbury; Graham Watt; Sally Wyke; Bruce Guthrie
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  3 in total

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3.  A Novel Patient Values Tab for the Electronic Health Record: A User-Centered Design Approach.

Authors:  Anjali Varma Desai; Chelsea L Michael; Gilad J Kuperman; Gregory Jordan; Haley Mittelstaedt; Andrew S Epstein; MaryAnn Connor; Rika Paula B Villar; Camila Bernal; Dana Kramer; Mary Elizabeth Davis; Yuxiao Chen; Catherine Malisse; Gigi Markose; Judith E Nelson
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  3 in total

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