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A pre-post interventional study to reduce time spent on clinical documentation by nurses and midwives
Journal article   Peer reviewed

A pre-post interventional study to reduce time spent on clinical documentation by nurses and midwives

Alannah Cooper, Matthew A. Albrecht, Suzanne Kelly, Siobhan P. Eccles and Janie A. Brown
Journal of advanced nursing, Vol.80(4), pp.1452-1463
2024
PMID: 37983743

Abstract

Documentation Female Humans Midwifery Nursing Care Patient Care
Aim To evaluate the impact of a co-designed intervention to reduce time spent on clinical documentation and increase time for direct patient care. Design A pre- and post-test interventional study with multi-method evaluation, reported according to the Transparent Reporting of Evaluations with Nonrandomised Evaluations Designs guidelines. Methods An intervention to decrease the burden of documentation was co-designed and implemented. Pre- and post-intervention data were collected via time and motion studies and the Burden of Documentation for Nurses and Midwives (BurDoNsaM) survey. Documentation audits were conducted to assess intervention fidelity. Results Twenty-six shifts were observed (13 pre-intervention, 13 post-intervention). Although the coronavirus pandemic contributed to decreases in staffing levels by 38% (from 118 to 73 staff), the number of task episodes completed increased post-intervention, across all shift patterns. Documentation took less time to complete post-intervention when assessing time per episode. A mean increase of 201 episodes was observed on morning shifts, 78 on evening shifts and 309 on night shifts. There were small increases for time spent on direct patient care compared to pre-intervention but there was less time per episode. Results from the BurDoNsaM survey indicated that participants felt documentation took less time post-intervention. Documentation audits found completion improved as staff gained familiarity, but deteriorated when staffing levels were reduced. Conclusion The intervention was able to reduce time spent completing documentation, increasing the time available for direct patient care. Implications for the profession and/or patient care Completing clinical documentation is part of the daily work of nurses and midwives. Clinical documentation needs to accurately capture key information in a concise and streamlined manner to avoid unnecessary burdens and release time for direct patient care.

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Source: InCites

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
Citation topics
1 Clinical & Life Sciences
1.14 Nursing
1.14.703 Electronic Health Records
Web Of Science research areas
Nursing
ESI research areas
Clinical Medicine
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