Implementation of the eCARE structured electronic ward round template significantly reduced postoperative complication rates from 32.6% to 21.9% (p=0.03) and decreased median length of stay.
Observational (n=399)
No
Does a standardized electronic ward round template with closed-ended questions improve clinical documentation and patient outcomes in thoracic surgery inpatients?
399 thoracic surgery ward round notes were reviewed to evaluate the impact of a new electronic documentation template on reporting rates and patient outcomes.
eCARE (electronic Clinical Assessment for Round Evaluation) standardized ward round template using closed-ended questions.
Standard open-ended ward round notes.
Reporting rates of clinical parameters and patient outcomes including discharge planning, complication rates, post-surgical length of stay, and mortality.
Implementing a standardized, closed-ended electronic ward round template in thoracic surgery significantly improves clinical documentation, reduces complications, and shortens length of stay.
Absolute Event Rate: 21.9% vs 32.6%
p-value: p=0.03
Introduction Ward rounds are vital clinical processes that facilitate an opportunity for daily review and management of thoracic surgery inpatients. The aim of this study was to compare thoracic surgery ward round documentation against locally agreed standards and design a template to improve the detail and uniformity of this process to enhance patient care. Materials and methods Data for this audit was collected retrospectively and prospectively. Data was collected during three auditing periods and managed on Microsoft Excel. Descriptive statistics were used for its analysis. Chi-square and Fisher's Exact tests were used to test for differences in reporting rates. Results and discussion Initially, a total of 199 ward round notes were reviewed. Imaging results (19%) and discharge planning (23%) were not reported. eCARE (electronic Clinical Assessment for Round Evaluation) was developed to ensure that all aspects of patient evaluation recommended by the guidelines were included. Reporting rates significantly improved after such changes. We analysed the effect of the new ward round note on discharge planning (23.3 vs 41%, p<0.001), complication rates (32.6 vs 21.9%, p=0.03), post-surgical length of stay (LOS) (7.0 vs 5.0, p<0.001). Conclusion Over a year, we audited the Thoracic Surgery Department's ward round documentation against locally agreed standards in line with national recommendations. Several important items were not regularly reported. Using closed-ended questions improved reporting rates, and patient care was optimised. Further research should explore the impact of this new documentation method on patient care and postoperative outcomes in our Trust as well as other cardiothoracic centres.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Boyle et al. (Tue,) conducted a observational in Thoracic surgery inpatients (n=399). eCARE structured electronic ward round template vs. Standard open-ended ward round notes was evaluated on Complication rates (p=0.03). Implementation of the eCARE structured electronic ward round template significantly reduced postoperative complication rates from 32.6% to 21.9% (p=0.03) and decreased median length of stay.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a22e8993a78129ded666e4a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.7759/cureus.42784
Mark Boyle
National University of Ireland, Maynooth
Aina Pons
London North West Healthcare NHS Trust
Abdullah Alshammari
Kuwait Petroleum Corporation (Kuwait)
Cureus
Imperial College London
Royal Brompton Hospital
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...