Introduction of a section for recording dementia improves data capture on the ambulance electronic patient record: evidence from a regional quality improvement project
Introduction of a section for recording dementia improves data capture on the ambulance electronic patient record: evidence from a regional quality improvement project
Background: dementia is a common comorbidity in older people who require urgent or emergency ambulance attendance and influences clinical decisions and care pathways. Following an initial audit of dementia data and consultation with staff, a specific section (tab) to record dementia was introduced on an ambulance service electronic patient record (ePR). This includes a dementia diagnosis button and a free text section. We aimed to assess whether and how this improved recording.
Aims: to re-audit the proportion of ambulance ePRs where dementia is recorded for patients aged ≥65 years and describe the frequency of recording in patients aged <65; to analyse discrepancies in the place of recording dementia on the ePR by comparing data from the new dementia tab and other sections of the ePR.
Results: we included 112,193 ePRs of patients aged ≥65 with ambulance attendance from a 6 month period. The proportion with dementia recorded in patients aged ≥65 was 16.5%, increasing to 19.8% in patients aged ≥75, as compared to 13.5% (≥65) and 16.5% (≥75) in our previous audit. In this audit, of the 16.5% (n=18,515) of records with dementia, 69.9% (n=12,939) used the dementia button and 25.4% (n=4,704) recorded text in the dementia tab. Dementia was recorded in ePR free text fields (but not the dementia tab) in 29.7% of records. Eighteen other free text fields were used in addition to, or instead of, the dementia tab, including the patient’s social history, previous medical history and mental health. Dementia was present on the ePR of 0.4% (n=461) of patients aged <65.
Conclusions: an ePR dementia tab enabled ambulance clinicians to standardise the location of recording dementia and may have facilitated increased recording. We would recommend other ambulance Trusts capture this information in a specific section to improve information sharing and inform care planning for this patient group.
Dementia, Emergency Care of the older person, Electronic health records (EHR)
29-37
King, Phil
22b1aebb-199d-4abf-9350-0e0e88ed1ad2
Jadzinski, Patryk
68cd4bea-ee22-469d-93b5-813eb21a0da3
Pocock, Helen
ba8e097b-d073-46b2-9669-96e8e4689abc
Lofthouse-Jones, Chloe
a16df794-edd2-42f4-bd7a-693afb2cfea6
Brown, Martina
2995ccca-a289-4fdb-8c12-6753ed7d6b99
Fogg, Carole
42057537-d443-462a-8944-c804252c973b
1 September 2024
King, Phil
22b1aebb-199d-4abf-9350-0e0e88ed1ad2
Jadzinski, Patryk
68cd4bea-ee22-469d-93b5-813eb21a0da3
Pocock, Helen
ba8e097b-d073-46b2-9669-96e8e4689abc
Lofthouse-Jones, Chloe
a16df794-edd2-42f4-bd7a-693afb2cfea6
Brown, Martina
2995ccca-a289-4fdb-8c12-6753ed7d6b99
Fogg, Carole
42057537-d443-462a-8944-c804252c973b
King, Phil, Jadzinski, Patryk, Pocock, Helen, Lofthouse-Jones, Chloe, Brown, Martina and Fogg, Carole
(2024)
Introduction of a section for recording dementia improves data capture on the ambulance electronic patient record: evidence from a regional quality improvement project.
British Paramedic Journal, 9 (2), .
(doi:10.29045/14784726.2024.9.9.2.29).
Abstract
Background: dementia is a common comorbidity in older people who require urgent or emergency ambulance attendance and influences clinical decisions and care pathways. Following an initial audit of dementia data and consultation with staff, a specific section (tab) to record dementia was introduced on an ambulance service electronic patient record (ePR). This includes a dementia diagnosis button and a free text section. We aimed to assess whether and how this improved recording.
Aims: to re-audit the proportion of ambulance ePRs where dementia is recorded for patients aged ≥65 years and describe the frequency of recording in patients aged <65; to analyse discrepancies in the place of recording dementia on the ePR by comparing data from the new dementia tab and other sections of the ePR.
Results: we included 112,193 ePRs of patients aged ≥65 with ambulance attendance from a 6 month period. The proportion with dementia recorded in patients aged ≥65 was 16.5%, increasing to 19.8% in patients aged ≥75, as compared to 13.5% (≥65) and 16.5% (≥75) in our previous audit. In this audit, of the 16.5% (n=18,515) of records with dementia, 69.9% (n=12,939) used the dementia button and 25.4% (n=4,704) recorded text in the dementia tab. Dementia was recorded in ePR free text fields (but not the dementia tab) in 29.7% of records. Eighteen other free text fields were used in addition to, or instead of, the dementia tab, including the patient’s social history, previous medical history and mental health. Dementia was present on the ePR of 0.4% (n=461) of patients aged <65.
Conclusions: an ePR dementia tab enabled ambulance clinicians to standardise the location of recording dementia and may have facilitated increased recording. We would recommend other ambulance Trusts capture this information in a specific section to improve information sharing and inform care planning for this patient group.
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King et al Introduction of a section to record dementia REVISED CLEAN with supp
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Accepted/In Press date: 16 May 2024
Published date: 1 September 2024
Keywords:
Dementia, Emergency Care of the older person, Electronic health records (EHR)
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Local EPrints ID: 491535
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/491535
ISSN: 1478-4726
PURE UUID: d6764492-fdec-43b8-9514-544167bc83e1
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Date deposited: 25 Jun 2024 17:08
Last modified: 12 Sep 2024 04:01
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Author:
Phil King
Author:
Patryk Jadzinski
Author:
Helen Pocock
Author:
Chloe Lofthouse-Jones
Author:
Martina Brown
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