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Co-design of an intervention to reduce the burden of clinical documentation: A clinician-researcher collaboration
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Co-design of an intervention to reduce the burden of clinical documentation: A clinician-researcher collaboration

Alannah Cooper, Suzanne Kelly and Janie A. Brown
Applied nursing research, Vol.73, 151730
2023
PMID: 37722798

Abstract

Burden Clinical documentation Co-design intervention Midwives Nurses Workload
Aim To co-design an intervention to reduce the burden of clinical documentation for nurses and midwives. Methods A clinician-researcher collaboration used an action research approach to co-design an intervention to reduce clinical documentation. The study consisted of three phases: 1) Analysis of pre-intervention data, 2) Evaluation of existing documentation, 3) Intervention co-design and implementation. Results A total of 116 documents were reviewed using a three-stage evaluation process, identifying 28 documents that could be discontinued and 33 documents to be modified for the intervention. This resulted in an average of 7 documents for women who had a vaginal birth (decreased from 13), 9 documents for women who had a caesarean (decreased from 18), and 7 documents for newborns (previously 7–10). The minimum number of documents for a mother and baby reduced from 20 pre-intervention to 14 post-intervention. Conclusion The collaboration successfully co-designed and implemented an intervention to address the burden of clinical documentation that can be replicated in other healthcare settings.

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