'Paper care not patient care': Nurse and patient experiences of comprehensive risk assessment and care plan documentation in hospital.

care plan documentation multidisciplinary team nurses patients preventable harms qualitative study risk assessment

Journal

Journal of clinical nursing
ISSN: 1365-2702
Titre abrégé: J Clin Nurs
Pays: England
ID NLM: 9207302

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Feb 2023
Historique:
revised: 19 01 2022
received: 10 11 2021
accepted: 31 01 2022
pubmed: 31 3 2022
medline: 17 1 2023
entrez: 30 3 2022
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

To explore organisation-wide experiences of person-centred care and risk assessment practices using existing healthcare organisation documentation. There is increasing emphasis on multidimensional risk assessments during hospital admission. However, little is known about how nurses use multidimensional assessment documentation in clinical practice to address preventable harms and optimise person-centred care. A qualitative descriptive study reported according to COREQ. Metropolitan tertiary hospital and rehabilitation hospital servicing a population of 550,000. A sample of 111 participants (12 patients, 4 family members/carers, 94 nurses and 1 allied health professional) from a range of wards/clinical locations. Semi-structured interviews and focus groups were conducted at two time points. The audio recording was transcribed, and an inductive thematic analysis was used to provide insight from multiple perspectives. Three main themes emerged: (1) 'What works well in practice' included: efficiency in the structure of the documentation; the Introduction, Situation, Background Assessment, Recommendation (ISBAR) framework and prompting for clinical decision-making were valued by nurses; and direct patient care is always prioritised. (2) 'What does not work well in practice': obtaining the patient's signature on daily care plans; multidisciplinary (MDT) involvement; duplication of paperwork and person-centred goals are not well-captured in care plan documentation. (3) 'Experience of care'; satisfaction of person-centred care; communication in the MDT was important, but sometimes insufficient; patients had variable involvement in their daily care plan; and inadequate integration of care between MDT team which negatively impacted patients. Efficient and streamlined documentation systems should herald feedback from nurses to address their clinical workflow needs and can support, and capture, their decision-making that enables partnership with patients to improve the individualisation of care provision. The integration of effective MDT involvement in clinical documentation was problematic and resulted in unmet supportive care from the patient's perspective.

Sections du résumé

AIMS AND OBJECTIVES OBJECTIVE
To explore organisation-wide experiences of person-centred care and risk assessment practices using existing healthcare organisation documentation.
BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
There is increasing emphasis on multidimensional risk assessments during hospital admission. However, little is known about how nurses use multidimensional assessment documentation in clinical practice to address preventable harms and optimise person-centred care.
DESIGN METHODS
A qualitative descriptive study reported according to COREQ.
METHODS METHODS
Metropolitan tertiary hospital and rehabilitation hospital servicing a population of 550,000. A sample of 111 participants (12 patients, 4 family members/carers, 94 nurses and 1 allied health professional) from a range of wards/clinical locations. Semi-structured interviews and focus groups were conducted at two time points. The audio recording was transcribed, and an inductive thematic analysis was used to provide insight from multiple perspectives.
RESULTS RESULTS
Three main themes emerged: (1) 'What works well in practice' included: efficiency in the structure of the documentation; the Introduction, Situation, Background Assessment, Recommendation (ISBAR) framework and prompting for clinical decision-making were valued by nurses; and direct patient care is always prioritised. (2) 'What does not work well in practice': obtaining the patient's signature on daily care plans; multidisciplinary (MDT) involvement; duplication of paperwork and person-centred goals are not well-captured in care plan documentation. (3) 'Experience of care'; satisfaction of person-centred care; communication in the MDT was important, but sometimes insufficient; patients had variable involvement in their daily care plan; and inadequate integration of care between MDT team which negatively impacted patients.
CONCLUSIONS CONCLUSIONS
Efficient and streamlined documentation systems should herald feedback from nurses to address their clinical workflow needs and can support, and capture, their decision-making that enables partnership with patients to improve the individualisation of care provision.
RELEVANCE TO CLINICAL PRACTICE CONCLUSIONS
The integration of effective MDT involvement in clinical documentation was problematic and resulted in unmet supportive care from the patient's perspective.

Identifiants

pubmed: 35352417
doi: 10.1111/jocn.16291
pmc: PMC10084263
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

523-538

Subventions

Organisme : ACT Health, Australia
Organisme : University of Canberra

Informations de copyright

© 2022 The Authors. Journal of Clinical Nursing published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

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Auteurs

Catherine Paterson (C)

School of Nursing, Midwifery and Public Health, University of Canberra, Bruce, Australian Capital Territory, Australia.
Canberra Health Services and ACT Health, SYNERGY Nursing and Midwifery Research Centre, Canberra Hospital, Garran, Australian Capital Territory, Australia.
School of Nursing, Midwifery and Paramedicine, Robert Gordon University, Aberdeen, UK.

Cara Roberts (C)

School of Nursing, Midwifery and Public Health, University of Canberra, Bruce, Australian Capital Territory, Australia.

Kasia Bail (K)

School of Nursing, Midwifery and Public Health, University of Canberra, Bruce, Australian Capital Territory, Australia.
Canberra Health Services and ACT Health, SYNERGY Nursing and Midwifery Research Centre, Canberra Hospital, Garran, Australian Capital Territory, Australia.

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Classifications MeSH