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Increasing Nursing Documentation Efficiency With Wearable Sensors for Pressure Injury Prevention.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Rose, A; Cooley, A; Yap, TL; Alderden, J; Sabol, VK; Lin, J-RA; Brooks, K; Kennerly, SM
Published in: Critical care nurse
April 2022

Documentation presents an overwhelming burden to bedside clinical nurses. Nurses must manually enter several hundred data points into electronic health record flow sheets, taking time from direct patient care and introducing opportunity for documentation errors.A patient record audit revealed a significant gap in documented patient repositioning events. This quality improvement initiative evaluated automated repositioning documentation via a wearable sensor system.A pretest-posttest design was used to examine retrospectively collected manual documentation and prospectively collected sensor documentation of patient repositioning events in a 148-bed rural community hospital. Repositioning documentation manually entered into electronic health records during the baseline period (January 1 to February 28, 2018) was compared with automatic, sensor-based repositioning documentation during the implementation period (corresponding months in 2019 and 2020 to eliminate seasonality).A convenience sample of 105 patient records was reviewed. The mean documented patient repositioning interval was 6.6 hours in the baseline period and 2.4 hours in the implementation period. The improvement was most pronounced in patients with obesity, whose mean repositioning interval improved from 9.4 hours to 2.5 hours. Documentation compliance (actual vs expected repositioning documentation) was 31% with manual documentation and 82% with automatic sensor-based documentation.Repositioning was documented more than 2.5 times as frequently with sensor technology as with manual data entry. Body position and reasons for delayed repositioning events were documented more completely with sensor technology. Automated documentation may improve the accuracy of electronic health records and reduce the documentation burden for nurses.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Critical care nurse

DOI

EISSN

1940-8250

ISSN

0279-5442

Publication Date

April 2022

Volume

42

Issue

2

Start / End Page

14 / 22

Related Subject Headings

  • Wearable Electronic Devices
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Pressure Ulcer
  • Nursing Care
  • Nursing
  • Humans
  • Electronic Health Records
  • Documentation
  • 4205 Nursing
  • 3202 Clinical sciences
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Rose, A., Cooley, A., Yap, T. L., Alderden, J., Sabol, V. K., Lin, J.-R., … Kennerly, S. M. (2022). Increasing Nursing Documentation Efficiency With Wearable Sensors for Pressure Injury Prevention. Critical Care Nurse, 42(2), 14–22. https://doi.org/10.4037/ccn2022116
Rose, Angelia, Annemari Cooley, Tracey L. Yap, Jenny Alderden, Valerie K. Sabol, Jiunn-Ru Angela Lin, Katie Brooks, and Susan M. Kennerly. “Increasing Nursing Documentation Efficiency With Wearable Sensors for Pressure Injury Prevention.Critical Care Nurse 42, no. 2 (April 2022): 14–22. https://doi.org/10.4037/ccn2022116.
Rose A, Cooley A, Yap TL, Alderden J, Sabol VK, Lin J-RA, et al. Increasing Nursing Documentation Efficiency With Wearable Sensors for Pressure Injury Prevention. Critical care nurse. 2022 Apr;42(2):14–22.
Rose, Angelia, et al. “Increasing Nursing Documentation Efficiency With Wearable Sensors for Pressure Injury Prevention.Critical Care Nurse, vol. 42, no. 2, Apr. 2022, pp. 14–22. Epmc, doi:10.4037/ccn2022116.
Rose A, Cooley A, Yap TL, Alderden J, Sabol VK, Lin J-RA, Brooks K, Kennerly SM. Increasing Nursing Documentation Efficiency With Wearable Sensors for Pressure Injury Prevention. Critical care nurse. 2022 Apr;42(2):14–22.

Published In

Critical care nurse

DOI

EISSN

1940-8250

ISSN

0279-5442

Publication Date

April 2022

Volume

42

Issue

2

Start / End Page

14 / 22

Related Subject Headings

  • Wearable Electronic Devices
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Pressure Ulcer
  • Nursing Care
  • Nursing
  • Humans
  • Electronic Health Records
  • Documentation
  • 4205 Nursing
  • 3202 Clinical sciences