AI Article Synopsis

  • Outpatient rehab therapists face significant documentation burdens that impact their clinical care and work-life balance, similar to other healthcare professionals.
  • A qualitative study involving focus groups identified key themes in their documentation experiences, such as the need for more efficient tools and support to enhance communication of clinical care.
  • Prioritized strategies for improvement include implementing time-saving templates, enhancing dictation capabilities, and simplifying the EHR interface to alleviate the documentation load.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Outpatient rehabilitation (rehab) physical, occupational, and speech therapists use electronic health records (EHR), yet their documentation experiences, including any documentation burden, are not well researched. Therapists are a growing portion of the U.S. healthcare workforce, whose need is critical to the health of an aging population. We aimed to describe outpatient rehab therapists' documentation experiences and identify strategies for mitigating any documentation burden.

Materials And Methods: We used qualitative descriptive methodology to conduct 4 focus groups with outpatient rehab therapists at Hospital for Special Surgery, a multi-site orthopedic institution. Transcripts were inductively coded to identify themes and actionable strategies for improving the therapists' documentation experiences. Therapists provided feedback and prioritization of proposed strategies.

Results: A total of 13 therapists were interviewed. Five themes and 10 subthemes characterize the therapists' documentation experience by a feeling that documentation inhibits clinical care and work/life balance, a perceived lack of support and efficiencies, the desire to document to communicate clinical care, and a design vision for improving the EHR. Top prioritized strategies for improvement included use of timesaving templates, expanding dictation, decluttering the EHR interface, and support for free texting over discrete data capture.

Discussion: Outpatient rehab therapists experience documentation burden similar to that documented of physicians and nurses. Manual data entry imposes burden on therapists' time and clinical care.

Conclusion: A multi-faceted approach is needed for improving therapists' experiences including EHR redesign, technology supporting dictation and narrative to discrete data capture, and support from leadership and regulators.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11413440PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jamia/ocae192DOI Listing

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