Discipline of General Practice, The University of Queensland, Level 8, Health Sciences Building, Building 16/ 910, Royal Brisbane & Women's Hospital, Herston, Qld 4029 Brisbane, Australia.
BMC Med Inform Decis Mak. 2013 Sep 21;13:108. doi: 10.1186/1472-6947-13-108.
Paper-based Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health checks have promoted a preventive approach to primary care and provided data to support research at the Inala Indigenous Health Service, south-west Brisbane, Australia. Concerns about the limitations of paper-based health checks prompted us to change to a computerised system to realise potential benefits for clinical services and research capability. We describe the rationale, implementation and anticipated benefits of computerised Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health checks in one primary health care setting.
In May 2010, the Inala Indigenous Health Service commenced a project to computerise Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander child, adult, diabetic, and antenatal health checks. The computerised health checks were launched in September 2010 and then evaluated for staff satisfaction, research consent rate and uptake. Ethical approval for health check data to be used for research purposes was granted in December 2010.
Three months after the September 2010 launch date, all but two health checks (378 out of 380, 99.5%) had been completed using the computerised system. Staff gave the system a median mark of 8 out of 10 (range 5-9), where 10 represented the highest level of overall satisfaction. By September 2011, 1099 child and adult health checks, 138 annual diabetic checks and 52 of the newly introduced antenatal checks had been completed. These numbers of computerised health checks are greater than for the previous year (2010) of paper-based health checks with a risk difference of 0.07 (95% confidence interval 0.05, 0.10). Additionally, two research projects based on computerised health check data were underway.
The Inala Indigenous Health Service has demonstrated that moving from paper-based Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health checks to a system using computerised health checks is feasible and can facilitate research. We expect computerised health checks will improve clinical care and continue to enable research projects using validated data, reflecting the local Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community's priorities.
纸质的原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民健康检查促进了初级保健的预防措施,并为澳大利亚布里斯班西南部伊拉拉原住民健康服务的研究提供了数据支持。对纸质健康检查局限性的担忧促使我们转向使用计算机化系统,以实现临床服务和研究能力的潜在效益。我们描述了在一个初级保健环境中使用计算机化的原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民健康检查的基本原理、实施和预期效益。
2010 年 5 月,伊拉拉原住民健康服务开始了一个将原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民儿童、成人、糖尿病和产前健康检查计算机化的项目。2010 年 9 月推出了计算机化的健康检查,并随后评估了员工满意度、研究同意率和参与度。2010 年 12 月,健康检查数据用于研究目的的伦理批准获得通过。
2010 年 9 月推出后的三个月内,除了两份健康检查(380 份中的 378 份,99.5%)之外,所有的健康检查都使用计算机系统完成。员工对系统的评价中位数为 8 分(满分 10 分),其中 10 分表示最高的整体满意度。到 2011 年 9 月,已经完成了 1099 份儿童和成人健康检查、138 份年度糖尿病检查和新引入的 52 份产前检查。这些计算机化健康检查的数量超过了前一年(2010 年)的纸质健康检查,风险差异为 0.07(95%置信区间 0.05,0.10)。此外,基于计算机化健康检查数据的两个研究项目正在进行中。
伊拉拉原住民健康服务证明,从纸质的原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民健康检查转向使用计算机化健康检查是可行的,并且可以促进研究。我们预计,计算机化健康检查将改善临床护理,并继续通过验证数据来支持研究项目,反映当地原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民社区的优先事项。