Spreading Standardized Documentation of Pediatric Occupational and Physical Therapy Dose: A Quality Improvement Initiative.
Am J Occup Ther
; 78(4)2024 Jul 01.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-38836792
ABSTRACT
IMPORTANCE Clinicians and researchers can leverage clinical documentation of therapy services for quality improvement and research purposes. However, documentation is often institution specific and may not adequately capture the dose of therapy delivered, thus limiting collaboration. OBJECTIVE:
To implement documentation of pediatric occupational and physical therapy dose from one institution to another institution. Dose documentation includes the frequency, intensity, time, and type of interventions delivered (FITT Epic® Flowsheet) at each session.DESIGN:
Prospective time-series quality improvement study.SETTING:
Two large urban pediatric hospitals.PARTICIPANTS:
Occupational and physical therapy staff members. INTERVENTION Staff training and feedback loops utilizing existing groups. OUTCOMES ANDMEASURES:
The process measure (number of available staff trained and using the FITT Epic Flowsheet over time) and the outcome measure (percentage of FITT Epic Flowsheets used for treatment visits each month) were analyzed using a statistical process control chart. The balancing measure (percentage of notes closed before 7 p.m. on the same day as the encounter) was analyzed using mean per month across three time periods.RESULTS:
Fifty-seven staff members (68%) attended formal training. On average, clinicians documented 90% of sessions using the FITT Epic Flowsheet after implementation. There was no change observed in the balancing measure. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Documentation of dose was spread from one institution to another. Shared documentation will facilitate future collaboration for quality improvement and research purposes. Occupational therapy practitioners and leaders should consider implementing documentation with common dose elements. Plain-LanguageSummary:
Occupational therapy documentation is often institution specific and may not adequately capture the dose of therapy (frequency, intensity, time) or types of interventions that were delivered, thus limiting opportunities for collaboration between institutions. This article adds to the literature on administrative supports for clinical and quality improvement research by illustrating a specific example of how documentation of dose can be shared from one institution to another. The data show that clinicians at one institution started using a new style of documentation using the FITT Epic® Flowsheet and shared discrete dose elements with another institution, creating new opportunities for collaboration. Shared documentation can facilitate future collaboration for quality improvement and research purposes.
Full text:
1
Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Occupational Therapy
/
Documentation
/
Quality Improvement
Limits:
Child
/
Humans
Language:
En
Journal:
Am J Occup Ther
/
Am. j. occup. ther
/
American journal of occupational therapy
Year:
2024
Document type:
Article
Country of publication: