Bajpai Kartikeya, Chown Jillian, Astik Gopi, Green Kristine
Work, Technology & Organization Department, EM LYON Business School, Ecully, France
Kellogg School of Management, Management & Organizations Department, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, USA.
BMJ Lead. 2022 Sep;6(3):180-185. doi: 10.1136/leader-2021-000495. Epub 2021 Oct 20.
Clinical documentation quality is an important way to facilitate clinical communication, improve patient safety metrics and optimise hospital coding and public reporting. However, the monitoring of clinicians by external individuals (ie, those outside the profession or emanating from outside clinical teams) raises difficult questions relating to the autonomy of clinicians and an organisation's control over clinical work. Typically, documentation improvement initiatives have relied solely on electronic monitoring systems to vet clinician documentation. In such systems, quality personnel monitor clinical documentation and, on encountering potentially problematic content, use an electronic querying system to ask the clinicians to voluntarily clarify or modify the text if appropriate. Importantly, clinicians retain their professional autonomy and can choose to disagree with documentation requests. The current study empirically examines a clinical documentation improvement program which takes a different approach. This programme uses two modes of querying clinicians: (1) conventional electronic documentation clarification queries and (2) in-person verbal documentation clarification requests.
We conducted regression analyses using archival documentation query data (n=19 650) from an American teaching hospital to compare the efficacy of conventional electronic documentation clarification queries and in-person verbal documentation clarification requests. Our dependent variable is the length of time between the documentation clarification request and the resolution of the query (ie, the time until a clinician responds).
Our analyses demonstrate that in-person verbal documentation clarification requests are associated with a 30-hour reduction in the time it takes for a query to be resolved relative to electronic-only queries.
The results suggest that while electronic regulatory systems might afford hospitals with opportunities to scale quality initiatives in a cost-effective manner, organisational efforts to influence clinical work may yet benefit from the human touch of in-person regulator-clinician interaction. Furthermore, the replacement of in-person compliance interactions with digital compliance requests can potentially produce negative compliance outcomes.
临床文档质量是促进临床沟通、改善患者安全指标以及优化医院编码和公共报告的重要途径。然而,由外部人员(即专业领域以外或临床团队以外的人员)对临床医生进行监督,引发了与临床医生自主权以及组织对临床工作的控制相关的难题。通常,文档改进举措仅依赖电子监测系统来审查临床医生的文档。在这类系统中,质量控制人员监测临床文档,一旦遇到潜在的问题内容,就使用电子查询系统要求临床医生在适当情况下自愿澄清或修改文本。重要的是,临床医生保留其专业自主权,可以选择不同意文档修改要求。本研究通过实证检验了一个采用不同方法的临床文档改进项目。该项目使用两种方式向临床医生进行查询:(1)传统的电子文档澄清查询,以及(2)面对面的口头文档澄清请求。
我们使用一家美国教学医院的存档文档查询数据(n = 19650)进行回归分析,以比较传统电子文档澄清查询和面对面口头文档澄清请求的效果。我们的因变量是文档澄清请求与查询解决之间的时长(即临床医生做出回应所需的时间)。
我们的分析表明,与仅使用电子方式的查询相比,面对面的口头文档澄清请求能使查询解决时间缩短30小时。
结果表明,虽然电子监管系统可能为医院提供以具有成本效益的方式扩大质量改进举措的机会,但组织在影响临床工作方面的努力可能仍会受益于监管人员与临床医生面对面互动所带来的人性化关怀。此外,用数字化合规请求取代面对面的合规互动可能会产生负面的合规结果。