Objectives: The project aim was to determine current use and documentation of medical chaperones within a major breast service unit. It explored ways of improving adherence to professional guidelines concerning chaperones.
Setting: The single centre quality improvement project was completed in a tertiary breast service unit in North West London. It was a three-stage project with initial audit in October 2013, 1st postintervention cycle in November 2013 and 2nd postintervention cycle in October 2014.
Participants: In each study cycle, data were collected from entries in clinic notes until at least 155 encounters with documented clinical examination were analysed. All notes were of female patients.
Interventions: (1) Intervention 1st cycle: presentation and discussion of chaperone guidelines alongside reminder posters and introduction of note stamp. (2) Intervention 2nd cycle: note stamp alone.
Primary And Secondary Outcome Measures: Documentation of chaperone offer, documentation of patient preference regarding chaperone, identifier (name or signature) of chaperone present and gender of examining clinician.
Results: In the 1st postintervention cycle, 69.95% documentation of chaperone offer was recorded, p<0.001, CI (59.04% to 80.76%). This result was replicated in the 2nd postintervention cycle a year later with 74.86% documentation of chaperone offer recorded, p<0.001, CI (66.41% to 83.31%). The 4.91% difference was insignificant; p=0.294, CI (14.03% to 4.21%).
Conclusions: The authors suggest that a proforma approach to medical chaperones is an effective means of ensuring adherence to best practice guidelines. A stamp, or similar, that can be embedded into documentation structure is an effective example of such an approach. Improved documentation allows any problems with adherence to guidelines to be more easily identified, helping to ensure the safeguarding of patients and staff involved in intimate examinations.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2014-007319 | DOI Listing |
J Med Internet Res
December 2024
Department of Biomedical Informatics, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, United States.
Background: As of 2021, at least 4 out of every 5 hospitals offered patients access to clinical notes via a web-based patient portal, a number that is expected to grow because of the 21st Century Cures Act. There is limited data on how open note use may have evolved over time or which types of clinical interactions were viewed most in the outpatient setting.
Objective: This study aims to analyze trends in outpatient open note access over time; characterize usage in terms of age, sex, and clinical interaction type; and assess the method of access to help uncover areas of improvement in patient engagement and identify further areas of research.
J Cancer Surviv
December 2024
Leeds Institute of Cardiovascular and Metabolic Medicine, School of Medicine, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK.
Purpose: Assessing the long-term impact of cancer on people's lives is challenging due to confounding issues such as aging and comorbidities. We aimed to investigate this impact by comparing the outcomes of cancer survivors with a matched control cohort.
Methods: This was a cross-sectional survey of breast, colorectal and ovarian cancer survivors approximately 5 years post-diagnosis and a cohort of age, sex and social deprivation-matched controls who had never had a cancer diagnosis.
Law 405/2001, DGR of 30 July 2012, n. 45-4248 and the DGR of 2 August 2013, n. 85-6287 provide that ASLs guarantee the direct distribution of drugs from the Company's Therapeutic Handbook (PTA) necessary for the treatment of patients in residential and semi-residential care.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Med Educ Curric Dev
October 2023
Department of Pediatrics, Cooper University Hospital, Camden, NJ, USA.
Objectives: Interns spend an inordinate amount of the workday writing notes, leading to less time in direct patient care. Since the introduction of the 80-h workweek, it has been shown that interns spend 12% of the workday in direct patient care, compared to 40% at the computer. A dedicated note-writing hour was introduced into the pediatric intern shift to evaluate its effects on note writing behaviors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe cover image for this edition of Technology and Culture is a franked Soviet stamp. Despite its seemingly unassuming form, this stamp celebrates a pivotal moment in spaceflight history: the first woman to complete a successful orbital flight in space, Valentina Tereshkova. The image draws together cosmonaut, early spacecraft operations, and emerging understandings of the Earth's upper atmosphere, to succinctly illustrate Tereshkova's achievement.
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