| Literature DB >> 31743088 |
Juliessa M Pavon, Richard J Sloane, Carl F Pieper, Cathleen S Colón-Emeric, David Gallagher, Harvey J Cohen, Katherine S Hall, Miriam C Morey, Midori McCarty, Thomas L Ortel, Susan N Hastings.
Abstract
This study describes the availability of physical activity information in the electronic health record, explores how electronic health record documentation correlates with accelerometer-derived physical activity data, and examines whether measured physical activity relates to venous thromboembolism (VTE) prophylaxis use. Prospective observational data comes from community-dwelling older adults admitted to general medicine (n = 65). Spearman correlations were used to examine association of accelerometer-based daily step count with documented walking distance and with duration of VTE prophylaxis. Only 52% of patients had documented walking in nursing and/or physical therapy/occupational therapy notes during the first three hospital days. Median daily steps recorded via accelerometer was 1,370 (interquartile range = 854, 2,387) and correlated poorly with walking distance recorded in physical therapy/occupational therapy notes (median 33 feet/day [interquartile range = 12, 100]; r = .24; p = .27). Activity measures were not associated with use or duration of VTE prophylaxis. VTE prophylaxis use does not appear to be directed by patient activity, for which there is limited documentation.Entities:
Keywords: electronic health record; inpatient; mobility; older adults
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Year: 2020 PMID: 31743088 PMCID: PMC7210062 DOI: 10.1123/japa.2018-0462
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Aging Phys Act ISSN: 1063-8652 Impact factor: 1.961