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Journal Article

Citation

de Mul M, van den Berg M. Med. Inform. Internet Med. 2007; 32(2): 157-167.

Affiliation

Erasmus MC, University Medical Centre Rotterdam, Institute of Health Policy and Management. Rotterdam. The Netherlands.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2007, Society for the Internet in Medicine, Publisher Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/09670260701231284

PMID

17541865

Abstract

The medical trauma record, produced in the Accident & Emergency Departments (AEDs) receives much attention from both health-care professionals and parties interested in quality of care. While it is an important data source for health-care professionals in their everyday work, and for quality assessment by third parties, the (paper) medical record is usually negatively evaluated because of incompleteness. In this article, we show that completeness is relative to the purpose for which the record is used. We distinguish two contexts in which the trauma record is used: the primary-care process at the AED, and assessment and monitoring of trauma care. Incompleteness of the medical record is valued differently in these contexts. Especially with regard to the information demands of quality assessment, and more specifically the national trauma registry, the work processes in the AED have not evolved sufficiently as yet. Information technology has great power to improve completeness and to facilitate quality assessment, but it cannot solve the problem of incompleteness in itself. One solution we propose is to restructure the recording process by introducing a clerk. This clerk could also be a nurse or physician who is temporarily released from direct patient care.


Language: en

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