教育研究:探索标准化、特定条件笔记模板对多个住院医师诊所质量指标和效率的影响。

Neurology. Education Pub Date : 2025-03-05 eCollection Date: 2025-03-01 DOI:10.1212/NE9.0000000000200200
Andrew Breithaupt, Sonam Mohan, Robert Thombley, Samuel D Pimentel, Vanja C Douglas
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景和目的:电子健康记录文件负担对医生满意度和患者护理产生负面影响。尽管构造良好的笔记对护理质量和安全很重要,但大多数笔记模板都是由医生个人创建和维护的,导致效率低下和笔记质量不稳定。本研究旨在评估标准化、特定情况笔记模板是否能提高门诊神经病住院医师撰写笔记的效率和质量。方法:在一项质量改进研究中,从2021年7月至2022年6月,随机、非盲设计,为2个门诊的神经内科住院医师分配癫痫、头痛和帕金森病(PD)的标准化模板。标准化模板是根据这些疾病专家的输入创建的。效率是根据写笔记的时间和字符来衡量的,而质量是根据美国神经病学学会对每种情况的质量指标通过图表审查来评估的。一项定性调查收集了居民对模板的意见。采用线性回归模型进行效率和质量分析。结果:研究纳入了34名神经内科住院医师中的23名。在研究的前6个月,有36%的符合条件的接触使用了模板,在研究的后6个月,有65%的符合条件的接触使用了模板。在模板组和非模板组之间,花在写笔记上的时间没有显著差异。虽然两组在大多数领域的质量指标相似,但模板组记录的癫痫患者驾驶状态的质量指标更为一致(92%对53%,p = 0.002), PD患者药物相关运动症状(95%对50%,p = 0.01),以及头痛管理的生活方式改变(77%对21%,p = 0.005)。居民反馈表明,模板促进了临床工作流程,并促使更彻底的病人询问。讨论:标准化的、特定于条件的模板在不增加花费时间的情况下改进了质量度量的文档。尽管最初对模板使用的接受程度较低,但随着时间的推移,观察到模板使用的增加,这表明通过实施努力有可能得到更广泛的接受。这些模板由主题专家更新和维护,为将优质护理清单和知识纳入临床医生的工作流程提供了机会。这需要进一步研究模板的实施及其对神经科医生和全科医生的护理质量和教育的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Education Research: Exploring the Impact of Standardized, Condition-Specific Note Templates on Quality Metrics and Efficiency in Multiple Resident Clinics.

Background and objectives: Electronic health record documentation burden negatively affects physician satisfaction and patient care. Although well-constructed notes are important for care quality and safety, most note templates are created and maintained by individual physicians, leading to inefficiency and variable note quality. This study aimed to assess whether standardized, condition-specific note templates could enhance the efficiency and quality of notes written by neurology residents in the outpatient setting.

Methods: In a quality improvement study with a randomized, nonblinded design from July 2021 to June 2022, neurology residents were assigned standardized templates for epilepsy, headache, and Parkinson disease (PD) in 2 outpatient clinics. The standardized templates were created with input from specialists in these disorders. Efficiency was gauged based on the time and characters involved in note writing while quality was assessed by adherence to American Academy of Neurology quality metrics for each condition through chart review. A qualitative survey gathered resident opinions on the templates. Linear regression models were used in the efficiency and quality analyses.

Results: The study included 23 of 34 neurology residents. Templates were used in 36% of eligible encounters over the first 6 months of the study and 65% over the last 6 months. No significant difference in time spent on note writing was observed between the template and nontemplate groups. While both groups showed similar quality measures across most domains, the template group documented quality measures more consistently for driving status in epilepsy (92% vs 53%, p = 0.002), medication-related motor symptoms in PD (95% vs 50%, p = 0.01), and lifestyle changes in headache management (77% vs 21%, p = 0.005). Resident feedback suggested that the templates facilitated clinic workflows and prompted more thorough patient inquiry.

Discussion: Standardized, condition-specific templates improved documentation of quality metrics without increasing time spent. Despite initial low uptake of template use, an increase was observed over time, indicating potential for wider acceptance with implementation efforts. These templates, updated and maintained by subject matter experts, serve as an opportunity to incorporate quality care checklists and knowledge into a clinician's workflow. This warrants further research into template implementation and its effects on care quality and education for neurologists and generalists.

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