Neuromechanics, Interventions, and Continuing Education Research (NICER) Laboratory, Indiana State University, Terre Haute.
Department of Health, Exercise and Sports Sciences, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque.
J Athl Train. 2019 Jul;54(7):822-830. doi: 10.4085/1062-6050-230-18. Epub 2019 Aug 6.
Medical documentation is a required component of patient care in all health care professions.
To evaluate athletic trainers' perceived behaviors toward, barriers to, and confidence in their medical documentation.
Cross-sectional study.
Web-based survey.
We purchased a list of randomly selected e-mails from the National Athletic Trainers' Association. Of the 9578 participants, 1150 accessed our questionnaire (12.0% access rate), 1053 completed at least 1 portion, and 904 completed the questionnaire in its entirety (85.8% completion rate). Of the participants, 60.1% (n = 569/947) were female, 66.6% (n = 632/949) held a master's degree, 39.3% (n = 414/1053) worked in a collegiate or university setting, and 36.1% (n = 381/1053) worked in a secondary school setting.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): We used a 31-item questionnaire with demographics (12 items), medical documentation behaviors (16 items), barriers (2 items), and perceptions (1 multipart item) sections. The questionnaire explored athletic trainers' behaviors as well as confidence in, comfort with, and concerns about their documentation practices (Cronbach α = 0.887). We used descriptive statistics to identify characteristics of central tendency (mean, standard deviation, mode, frequency).
Participants always (45.7%, n = 478/1046) or very frequently (39.0%, n = 408/1046) used a double documentation system consisting of electronic and paper records (50.4%, n = 523/1038). They most often documented to provide legal protection (86.8%, n = 914/1053), because it is a legal obligation (79.1%, n = 833/1053), or to track patient progress (83.9%, n = 883/1053). The most frequently cited barriers to medical documentation were time (76.5%, n = 806/1053), managing too many patients (51.9%, n = 547/1053), technological concerns (17.2%, n = 181/1053), and software limitations (17.2%, n = 181/1053). Respondents believed they were competent, comfortable, and confident in their documentation practices.
We were able to evaluate the generalizability of previous research while adding to the understanding of the behaviors toward, barriers to, and perceptions about medical documentation. We confirmed that time and patient load affected the ability to perform high-quality medical documentation.
医疗文档是所有医疗保健专业人员提供患者护理的必备组成部分。
评估运动训练师对其医疗文档的行为、障碍和信心的看法。
横断面研究。
基于网络的调查。
我们从国家运动训练师协会购买了随机选择的电子邮件列表。在 9578 名参与者中,有 1150 人访问了我们的问卷(12.0%的访问率),有 1053 人至少完成了一部分,有 904 人完整地完成了问卷(85.8%的完成率)。在参与者中,60.1%(n=569/947)为女性,66.6%(n=632/949)拥有硕士学位,39.3%(n=414/1053)在学院或大学工作,36.1%(n=381/1053)在中学工作。
我们使用了一个包含 31 个项目的问卷,其中包括人口统计学(12 个项目)、医疗文档行为(16 个项目)、障碍(2 个项目)和看法(1 个多部分项目)部分。问卷探讨了运动训练师的行为,以及他们对文档实践的信心、舒适度和关注(Cronbach α=0.887)。我们使用描述性统计来确定中心趋势的特征(平均值、标准差、模式、频率)。
参与者总是(45.7%,n=478/1046)或非常频繁(39.0%,n=408/1046)使用由电子和纸质记录组成的双重文档系统(50.4%,n=523/1038)。他们最常记录是为了提供法律保护(86.8%,n=914/1053),因为这是法律义务(79.1%,n=833/1053),或跟踪患者进展(83.9%,n=883/1053)。医疗文档记录最常被提及的障碍是时间(76.5%,n=806/1053),管理太多患者(51.9%,n=547/1053),技术问题(17.2%,n=181/1053)和软件限制(17.2%,n=181/1053)。受访者认为他们在文档记录方面有能力、舒适和自信。
我们能够评估先前研究的可推广性,同时增加对医疗文档行为、障碍和看法的理解。我们证实,时间和患者负担会影响高质量医疗文档记录的能力。