护理转移记录及其传递过程的详细分析与路线图建议:混合方法研究。

JMIR nursing Pub Date : 2025-02-21 DOI:10.2196/60810
Elisabeth Veronica Mess, Matthias Regner, Sabahudin Balic, Lukas Kleybolte, Lisa Daufratshofer, Andreas Mahler, Sabrina Tilmes, Viktor Werlitz, Claudia Reuter, Alexandra Teynor
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:德国医疗保健的数字化在改善患者护理、资源管理和效率方面具有巨大潜力。然而,严格的数据保护法规、零散的基础设施以及对变革的抵制阻碍了进步。这些挑战使得护理机构依赖于过时的纸质工作流程,特别是患者数据传输,尽管在护理短缺和护理需求不断增长的情况下,迫切需要有效的工具来支持卫生保健专业人员。目的:本文旨在分析德国的医疗过渡记录(CTR)和CTR传输过程作为过渡管理的一部分,并提出改进建议,以实现无缝的数字化解决方案。方法:为了了解当前手工CTR传递的挑战,我们使用了一种混合方法,包括基于网络的护理专业人员问卷调查、现场观察、业务流程模型和符号建模、CTR条目的语义和频率分析以及用户故事映射。结果:一项涉及德国护理专业人员(N=59)的基于网络的问卷调查显示,由于手工、患者转移的CTRs,患者护理出现了相当大的延误。在33个可用的回答(n=33)中,70% (n=23)的受访者主张数字传输以提高效率。护理机构(N= 5, 45%)和医院(N= 6, 55%)的观察(N=11)证实了较高的行政负担,医院内的平均每CTR 34.67 (SD 10.78)分钟,护理机构的平均每CTR 44.6 (SD 20.5)分钟。对各种CTRs (N=4)的语义分析突出了它们的差异和复杂性,强调了标准化的必要性。分析一个新的CTR标准(护理信息对象CTR)并手动映射一个现有的CTR到它表明该过程是模糊的,一些关联仍然不清楚。对CTR实体的频率分析揭示了哪些是最常用的。此外,与护理工作人员的讨论指出了最相关实体的候选人。在主要调查结果的基础上,提出了一个逐步过渡的方法,以制定一个标准化、安全的中转中心转移路线图建议。该路线图以用户故事图的形式呈现,包括“CTR转换器”(将传统的CTR映射到新标准)和“关心信息对象的CTR查看器/编辑器”(简而言之,CIO-CTR查看器和编辑器;一个用于查看、编辑和导出的新标准)显示了跨越过渡时间的可能性,直到所有机构都完全支持新标准。结论:未来的解决方案应该通过减少手工传输到内部系统、标准化CTR和提供安全的数字传输来简化整个CTR传输过程。这将对整个护理过程和患者体验产生积极影响。通过我们的解决方案,我们试图支持护理人员的日常活动和流程,直到全国性的州法规成功实施,尽管这方面的时间表仍不确定。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Detailed Analysis and Road Map Proposal for Care Transition Records and Their Transmission Process: Mixed Methods Study.

Background: The digitalization of health care in Germany holds great potential to improve patient care, resource management, and efficiency. However, strict data protection regulations, fragmented infrastructures, and resistance to change hinder progress. These challenges leave care institutions reliant on outdated paper-based workflows, particularly for patient data transmission, despite the pressing need for efficient tools to support health care professionals amid a nursing shortage and rising demand for care.

Objective: This paper aims to analyze Germany's care transition record (CTR) and CTR transmission process as part of transition management and suggests improvements toward a seamless digital solution.

Methods: To understand the current challenges of manual CTR transfers, we used a mixed methods approach, which included a web-based questionnaire with nursing professionals, field observations, business process model and notation modeling, semantic and frequency analysis of CTR entries, and user story mapping.

Results: A web-based questionnaire involving German nursing professionals (N=59) revealed considerable delays in patient care due to manual, patient-transferred CTRs. Of the 33 usable responses (n=33), 70% (n=23) of the respondents advocating for digital transmission to improve efficiency. Observations (N=11) in care facilities (n=5, 45%) and a hospital (n=6, 55%) confirmed the high administrative burden, averaging 34.67 (SD 10.78) minutes per CTR within a hospital and 44.6 (SD 20.5) minutes in care facilities. A semantic analysis of various CTRs (N=4) highlighted their differences and complexity, stressing the need for standardization. Analyzing a new CTR standard (care information object CTR) and manually mapping an existing CTR to it showed that the procedure was ambiguous, and some associations remained unclear. A frequency analysis of CTR entities revealed which were most used. In addition, discussions with care staff pointed out candidates for the most relevant entities. On the basis of the key findings, a stepwise transition approach toward a road map proposal for a standardized, secure transfer of CTRs was conceptualized. This road map in the form of a user story map, encompassing a "CTR transformer" (mapping of traditional CTRs to a new standard) and "care information object CTR viewer/editor" (in short, CIO-CTR viewer and editor; a new standard for viewing, editing, and exporting), shows a possibility to bridge the transition time until all institutions fully support the new standard.

Conclusions: A future solution should simplify the overall CTR transmission process by minimizing manual transfers into in-house systems, standardizing the CTR, and providing a secure digital transfer. This could positively impact the overall care process and patient experience. With our solutions, we attempt to support care staff in their daily activities and processes until nationwide state regulations are implemented successfully, though the timeline for this remains uncertain.

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CiteScore
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