Context: The electronic health record (EHR) has been identified as a potential site for gathering data about trainees' clinical performance, but these data are not collected or organised for this purpose. Therefore, a careful and rigorous approach is required to explore how EHR data could be meaningfully used for assessment purposes. The purpose of this study was to identify EHR performance metrics that represent both the independent and interdependent clinical performance of emergency medicine (EM) trainees and explore how they might be meaningfully used for assessment and feedback.
Methods: Using constructivist grounded theory, we conducted 21 semi-structured interviews with EM faculty members and residents. Participants were asked to identify the clinical actions of trainees that would be valuable for assessment and feedback and describe how those activities are represented in the EHR. Data collection and analysis, which consisted of three stages of coding, occurred iteratively.
Results: When faculty members and trainees in EM were asked to reflect on the usefulness of using EHR performance metrics for resident assessment and feedback they expressed both widespread support for the idea in principle and hesitation that aspects of clinical performance captured in the data would not be representative of residents' individual performance, but would rather reflect their interdependence with other team members and the systems in which they work. We highlight three categorisations of system-level interdependence - medical directives, technological systems and organisational systems - identified by our participants, and discuss strategies participants employed to navigate these forms of interdependence within the health care system.
Conclusions: System-level interdependence shapes physicians' performances, and yet, this impact is rarely corrected for or noted within clinical performance data. Educators have a responsibility to recognise system-level interdependence when teaching and consider system-level interdependence when assessing the performance of trainees in order to most effectively and fairly utilise the EHR as a source of assessment data.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/medu.14147 | DOI Listing |
Front Public Health
December 2024
Department of Women's and Children's Health, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
Background: The maternity continuum of care plays a vital role in improving maternal and neonatal outcomes. However, its uptake remains low in Ethiopia, highlighting the need to identify challenges within the primary health care system to inform practice. Hence, this study aimed to explore the challenges of the maternity continuum of care within the primary health care system in northwest Ethiopia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJMIR Med Inform
October 2024
Australian Centre for Health Services Innovation and Centre for Healthcare Transformation, School of Public Health and Social Work, Faculty of Health, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia.
Background: Computerized clinical decision support systems (CDSSs) enhance patient care through real-time, evidence-based guidance for health care professionals. Despite this, the effective implementation of these systems for health services presents multifaceted challenges, leading to inappropriate use and abandonment over the course of time. Using the Non-Adoption, Abandonment, Scale-Up, Spread, and Sustainability (NASSS) framework, this qualitative study examined CDSS adoption in a metropolitan health service, identifying determinants across implementation stages to optimize CDSS integration into health care practice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Adv Nurs
August 2024
Research Investigator (WOC), Research Service, Central Texas Veterans Health Care System, Temple, Texas, USA.
Aims: The longitudinal programme of research described in this paper seeks to generate knowledge about factors influencing the implementation of a system-level intervention, the clinical nurse leader care model, involving nurses as leaders at the frontlines of care and the outcomes achievable with successful implementation. The research programme has the following aims, (a) to clarify clinical nurse leader practice, (b) develop and empirically validate a translational model of frontline care delivery that includes clinical nurse leader practice and (c) delineate the patterns of and critical outcomes of successful implementation of the clinical nurse leader care model.
Design: This programme of research follows a knowledge-building trajectory involving multiple study designs in both qualitative (grounded theory, case study) and quantitative (descriptive, correlational and quasi-experimental) traditions.
Background: UK general practice has been described as being in crisis. A shortage and exodus of GPs is an urgent and challenging problem, attracting significant media attention, widespread public debate, and policy action.
Aim: Our review aims to examine which aspects of the healthcare system affect GP workforce sustainability, how, why, and for whom.
Age Ageing
March 2024
Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Background: There is a strong imperative to support people with dementia to live independently in their homes for as long as possible. A starting point is to understand how they manage medications on a daily basis.
Aim: To understand how people with dementia and their informal carers manage medications within the home setting to inform the identification of opportunities to improve medication management.
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