A Modern Snapshot of the Daily Work of Medical Interns—The Burden of Indirect Patient Care

2019 ◽  
Vol 179 (6) ◽  
pp. 767
Author(s):  
Christopher Moriates ◽  
F. Parker Hudson
Author(s):  
Victoria Aceti ◽  
Rocci Luppicini

Communication and information sharing is an important aspect of healthcare information technology and mHealth management. A main requirement in the quality of patient care is the ability of all health care participants to communicate. Research illustrates that the complexity of communicating within the health care system hinders the quality of health care service delivery. Health informatics have been touted as a way to improve communication deficiencies, which has led to the exponential growth of health informatics integration. However, research still lags in understanding how health informatics affects patient care, health professional work routines, and the overall health care system. This study investigates the extent to which mHealth technologies influence communication information sharing patterns between interdisciplinary health care providers in the delivery of health care services. This study was conducted at Hamilton Health Sciences and through a sociotechnical approach, focuses on both the end user’s experiences with mHealth in daily work communication scenarios, and the extent to which mHealth use affects interdisciplinary communication. Results indicate that there are several mitigating factors which influence communication patterns using mHealth technologies, including: information sharing, mobility, ergonomic and system design.


2011 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 228-238 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer Cox ◽  
Georgia Halkett ◽  
Claudia Anderson ◽  
Robert Heard

AbstractBackground and purpose: Research is increasingly important in radiation therapy, but radiation therapists (or therapy radiographers) (RTs) are relatively new to research and may have difficulty defining research topics. Our aim was to identify the group interests and focus research priorities of Australian RTs. Although not measured, an additional aim was to make RTs more aware of the relevance of RT research.Materials and methods: An Australia-wide Delphi process was used, examining the problems related to patient care, working with colleagues, and radiotherapy in general, that RTs experienced in their daily work. In an initial study, 374 problems were identified. These were translated into 53 research areas which were prioritised in the second stage of the study. Agreement between groups was analysed using a hierarchical cluster procedure and post hoc Scheffe multiple comparisons.Results: There were three groups of responders with varying degrees of research interest. There was agreed high importance (p > 0.01) for the technical aspects of radiation therapy, such as image guidance, intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) and patient positioning. There was significant disagreement (p < 0.001 to p = 0.023) between groups on the importance of patient care research.Conclusions: The strong interest in technical research is consistent with the rapid influx of technology, particularly in imaging. The disagreement on patient-related research may be of concern. The list of potential research areas specific to radiation therapy will be useful for new RT researchers to consider.


1992 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
pp. 98-101 ◽  
Author(s):  
Catherine Dooling ◽  
Alan Wolff

Quality is a major issue in industry. However, the performance of hospitals is predominantly measured by quantity. There is little accurate measurement of, and control over, the quality of patient care provided. Traditional medical quality assurance methods do not meet the basic criteria of an effective control system as defined in management theory. Occurrence screening is a method of medical quality control that overcomes many of these deficiencies. It detects adverse patient occurrences by screening medical records using outcome criteria and selective medical record review. The implementation of an occurrence screening program using a small number of criteria and retrospective review in the Medical Record Department of a 200 bed base hospital is described. Screening has been integrated into daily work practices in an efficient and cost effective manner. Medical record staff have become more aware of the importance of complete documentation and the profile of the department in the hospital has risen. Significant patient care problems have been detected by the screening process.


2010 ◽  
Vol 85 (10) ◽  
pp. 1583-1588 ◽  
Author(s):  
James A. Gordon ◽  
Erik K. Alexander ◽  
Steven W. Lockley ◽  
Erin Flynn-Evans ◽  
Suresh K. Venkatan ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Pia Liljamo ◽  
Ulla-Mari Kinnunen

Pain management, assessment and documentation is a crucial part of patient care. However, several studies show flaws in pain management processes. Documentation is not unified or even sufficient. The aim of this study was to describe how patient pain management has been recorded using the nursing diagnoses and nursing interventions of a standardized terminology, the Finnish Care Classification, (FinCC), and how that terminology should be further developed. The research data consisted of the daily nursing documentation notes of patient care episodes (n=806) during inpatient days (n=2564) at several specialty units (n=9). The documentation of pain management was found inadequate and insufficient. The results support the development of a new component, Pain management, and its attendant categories in the new version, FinCC 4.0, to help nurses document pain management in their daily work.


Author(s):  
Leonor Teixeira ◽  
Carlos Ferreira ◽  
Beatriz Sousa Santos

Healthcare is characterized by a highly complex environment where the process of patient care requires an unusual amount of communication between different healthcare professionals (HCPs). For a better patient care, the various HCPs have to cooperate, a processed often called shared care (Garde & Knaup, 2006; Schabetsberger, Ammenwerth, Andreatta, Gratl, Haux, & Lechleitner, 2006). Nowadays, there is an increasing incorporation of a heterogeneous set of Information Systems (ISs)—paper-based and computer-based—on the daily work of HCPs, in order to retrieve information about patients (Coiera, 2003; Van-Bemmel & Musen, 1997). The complexity of the patient care process combined with the heterogeneity of the information resources leads to a paradigm of data redundancy in the healthcare services in general, and hemophilia care in particular.


Neurosurgery ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 86 (1) ◽  
pp. 150-153 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher D Shank ◽  
Elizabeth N Kuhn ◽  
Mark N Hadley ◽  
Beverly C Walters

Abstract The bulk of a resident's daily work is patient care related; however, other aspects of residency training are vital both to a resident's education and to the advancement of the field. Basic science and clinical research are the more common academic activities in which residents participate after completion of daily patient care objectives. Less frequently, residents participate in a process vital to the delivery of efficient, cost-effective, and safe patient care: hospital policy development. Two policies were identified as outdated or absent: (1) the process for the declaration of brain death and (2) a policy for the use of hypertonic saline in the Neurosciences Intensive Care Unit. The policies were rewritten after review of the existing policy (when applicable), other institutions’ examples, national guidelines, and state and federal laws. Once written, proposals were reviewed by department leadership, hospital ethics, legal counsel, ad hoc specialty committees, the Medical Directors Council, and the Medical Executive Committee. After multiple revisions, each proposal was endorsed by the above bodies and ratified as hospital policy. Residents may make a substantial impact on patient care through active participation in the authorship and implementation of hospital policy. The inclusion of residents in policy development has improved the process for declaring brain death and management of patients with devastating neurological pathology. Resident involvement in hospital policy initiatives can be successful, valuable to the institution, and beneficial to patient care. Resident involvement is predicated on faculty and institutional support of such endeavors.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jürgen Durner ◽  
Siegfried Burggraf ◽  
Ludwig Czibere ◽  
Tobias Fleige ◽  
Michael Spannagel ◽  
...  

AbstractThe results of PCR measurements are regarded as unquestionable. This statement must be put into perspective. This relativization is particularly important in connection with the interpretation of SARS-CoV-2 results. Members of the critical infrastructure, such as nurses, may be quarantined although this is not necessary and are therefore missing from patient care. With our small but impressive comparison of methods and transport media for SARS-CoV-2, we not only show the different sensitivity of common routine systems and media in laboratory medicine. Further, we would like to inform clinically working physicians, who are not familiar with the technical weaknesses of the PCR investigation, about gaps and present solutions for their daily work.


JAMA ◽  
1966 ◽  
Vol 195 (1) ◽  
pp. 36-37 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. C. Quint
Keyword(s):  

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