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Impact of an Electronic Medical Record–Connected Questionnaire on Efficient Nursing Documentation: Usability and Efficacy Study

BACKGROUND: Documentation tasks comprise a large percentage of nurses’ workloads. Nursing records were partially based on a report from the patient. However, it is not a verbatim transcription of the patient's complaints but a type of medical record. Therefore, to reduce the time spent on nursi...

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Autores principales: Kodama, Kana, Konishi, Shozo, Manabe, Shirou, Okada, Katsuki, Yamaguchi, Junji, Wada, Shoya, Sugimoto, Kento, Itoh, Sakiko, Takahashi, Daiyo, Kawasaki, Ryo, Matsumura, Yasushi, Takeda, Toshihiro
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10562973/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37634203
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/51303
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author Kodama, Kana
Konishi, Shozo
Manabe, Shirou
Okada, Katsuki
Yamaguchi, Junji
Wada, Shoya
Sugimoto, Kento
Itoh, Sakiko
Takahashi, Daiyo
Kawasaki, Ryo
Matsumura, Yasushi
Takeda, Toshihiro
author_facet Kodama, Kana
Konishi, Shozo
Manabe, Shirou
Okada, Katsuki
Yamaguchi, Junji
Wada, Shoya
Sugimoto, Kento
Itoh, Sakiko
Takahashi, Daiyo
Kawasaki, Ryo
Matsumura, Yasushi
Takeda, Toshihiro
author_sort Kodama, Kana
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Documentation tasks comprise a large percentage of nurses’ workloads. Nursing records were partially based on a report from the patient. However, it is not a verbatim transcription of the patient's complaints but a type of medical record. Therefore, to reduce the time spent on nursing documentation, it is necessary to assist in the appropriate conversion or citation of patient reports to professional records. However, few studies have been conducted on systems for capturing patient reports in electronic medical records. In addition, there have been no reports on whether such a system reduces the time spent on nursing documentation. OBJECTIVE: This study aims to develop a patient self-reporting system that appropriately converts data to nursing records and evaluate its effect on reducing the documenting burden for nurses. METHODS: An electronic medical record–connected questionnaire and a preadmission nursing questionnaire were administered. The questionnaire responses entered by the patients were quoted in the patient profile for inpatient assessment in the nursing system. To clarify its efficacy, this study examined whether the use of the electronic questionnaire system saved the nurses’ time entering the patient profile admitted between August and December 2022. It also surveyed the usability of the electronic questionnaire between April and December 2022. RESULTS: A total of 3111 (78%) patients reported that they answered the electronic medical questionnaire by themselves. Of them, 2715 (88%) felt it was easy to use and 2604 (85%) were willing to use it again. The electronic questionnaire was used in 1326 of 2425 admission cases (use group). The input time for the patient profile was significantly shorter in the use group than in the no-use group (P<.001). Stratified analyses showed that in the internal medicine wards and in patients with dependent activities of daily living, nurses took 13%-18% (1.3 to 2 minutes) less time to enter patient profiles within the use group (both P<.001), even though there was no difference in the amount of information. By contrast, in the surgical wards and in the patients with independent activities of daily living, there was no difference in the time to entry (P=.50 and P=.20, respectively), but there was a greater amount of information in the use group. CONCLUSIONS: The study developed and implemented a system in which self-reported patient data were captured in the hospital information network and quoted in the nursing system. This system contributes to improving the efficiency of nurses’ task recordings.
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spelling pubmed-105629732023-10-11 Impact of an Electronic Medical Record–Connected Questionnaire on Efficient Nursing Documentation: Usability and Efficacy Study Kodama, Kana Konishi, Shozo Manabe, Shirou Okada, Katsuki Yamaguchi, Junji Wada, Shoya Sugimoto, Kento Itoh, Sakiko Takahashi, Daiyo Kawasaki, Ryo Matsumura, Yasushi Takeda, Toshihiro JMIR Nurs Original Paper BACKGROUND: Documentation tasks comprise a large percentage of nurses’ workloads. Nursing records were partially based on a report from the patient. However, it is not a verbatim transcription of the patient's complaints but a type of medical record. Therefore, to reduce the time spent on nursing documentation, it is necessary to assist in the appropriate conversion or citation of patient reports to professional records. However, few studies have been conducted on systems for capturing patient reports in electronic medical records. In addition, there have been no reports on whether such a system reduces the time spent on nursing documentation. OBJECTIVE: This study aims to develop a patient self-reporting system that appropriately converts data to nursing records and evaluate its effect on reducing the documenting burden for nurses. METHODS: An electronic medical record–connected questionnaire and a preadmission nursing questionnaire were administered. The questionnaire responses entered by the patients were quoted in the patient profile for inpatient assessment in the nursing system. To clarify its efficacy, this study examined whether the use of the electronic questionnaire system saved the nurses’ time entering the patient profile admitted between August and December 2022. It also surveyed the usability of the electronic questionnaire between April and December 2022. RESULTS: A total of 3111 (78%) patients reported that they answered the electronic medical questionnaire by themselves. Of them, 2715 (88%) felt it was easy to use and 2604 (85%) were willing to use it again. The electronic questionnaire was used in 1326 of 2425 admission cases (use group). The input time for the patient profile was significantly shorter in the use group than in the no-use group (P<.001). Stratified analyses showed that in the internal medicine wards and in patients with dependent activities of daily living, nurses took 13%-18% (1.3 to 2 minutes) less time to enter patient profiles within the use group (both P<.001), even though there was no difference in the amount of information. By contrast, in the surgical wards and in the patients with independent activities of daily living, there was no difference in the time to entry (P=.50 and P=.20, respectively), but there was a greater amount of information in the use group. CONCLUSIONS: The study developed and implemented a system in which self-reported patient data were captured in the hospital information network and quoted in the nursing system. This system contributes to improving the efficiency of nurses’ task recordings. JMIR Publications 2023-09-25 /pmc/articles/PMC10562973/ /pubmed/37634203 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/51303 Text en ©Kana Kodama, Shozo Konishi, Shirou Manabe, Katsuki Okada, Junji Yamaguchi, Shoya Wada, Kento Sugimoto, Sakiko Itoh, Daiyo Takahashi, Ryo Kawasaki, Yasushi Matsumura, Toshihiro Takeda. Originally published in JMIR Nursing (https://nursing.jmir.org), 25.09.2023. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR Nursing, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on https://nursing.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Kodama, Kana
Konishi, Shozo
Manabe, Shirou
Okada, Katsuki
Yamaguchi, Junji
Wada, Shoya
Sugimoto, Kento
Itoh, Sakiko
Takahashi, Daiyo
Kawasaki, Ryo
Matsumura, Yasushi
Takeda, Toshihiro
Impact of an Electronic Medical Record–Connected Questionnaire on Efficient Nursing Documentation: Usability and Efficacy Study
title Impact of an Electronic Medical Record–Connected Questionnaire on Efficient Nursing Documentation: Usability and Efficacy Study
title_full Impact of an Electronic Medical Record–Connected Questionnaire on Efficient Nursing Documentation: Usability and Efficacy Study
title_fullStr Impact of an Electronic Medical Record–Connected Questionnaire on Efficient Nursing Documentation: Usability and Efficacy Study
title_full_unstemmed Impact of an Electronic Medical Record–Connected Questionnaire on Efficient Nursing Documentation: Usability and Efficacy Study
title_short Impact of an Electronic Medical Record–Connected Questionnaire on Efficient Nursing Documentation: Usability and Efficacy Study
title_sort impact of an electronic medical record–connected questionnaire on efficient nursing documentation: usability and efficacy study
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10562973/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37634203
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/51303
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