Do goals of care documentation reflect the conversation? : evaluating conversation-documentation accuracy

Article indépendant

MA, Jessica E. | SCHLICHTE, Lindsay | HAVERFIELD, Marie | GAMBINO, Julia | LANGE, Allison | BLANCHARD, Kelly | MORGAN, Brianne | BEKELMAN, David B.

BACKGROUND: Documenting goals of care in the electronic health record is meant to relay patient preferences to other clinicians. Evaluating the content and documentation of nurse and social worker led goals of care conversations can inform future goals of care initiative efforts. METHODS: As part of the ADvancing symptom Alleviation with Palliative Treatment trial, this study analyzed goals of care conversations led by nurses and social workers and documented in the electronic health record. Informed by a goals of care communication guide, we identified five goals of care components: illness understanding, goals and values, end of life planning, surrogate, and advance directives. Forty conversation transcripts underwent content analysis. Through an iterative team process, we defined documentation accuracy as four categories: (1) Complete-comprehensive accurate documentation of the conversation, (2) Incomplete-partial documentation of the conversation, (3) Missing-discussed and not documented, and (4) Incorrect-misrepresented in documentation. We also defined-Not Discussed-for communication guide questions that were not discussed nor documented. A constant comparative approach was used to determine the presence or absence of conversation content in the documentation. RESULTS: All five goals of care components were discussed in 67% (27/40) of conversation transcripts. Compared to the transcripts, surrogate (37/40, 93%) and advance directives (36/40, 90%) were often documented completely. Almost 40% of goals and values (15/40, 38%) and half of end of life planning (19/40, 48%) were incomplete. Illness understanding was missing (13/40, 33%), not discussed (13/40, 33%), or incorrect (2/40, 5%). CONCLUSION: Nurse and social worker led goals of care conversations discussed and documented most components of the goals of care communication guide. Further research may guide how best to determine the relative importance of accuracy, especially in the broad setting of incomplete, missing, and incorrect EHR documentation.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jgs.18913

Voir la revue «Journal of the American Geriatrics Society»

Autres numéros de la revue «Journal of the American Geriatrics Society»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Do goals of care documentation reflect the co...

Article indépendant | MA, Jessica E. | Journal of the American Geriatrics Society

BACKGROUND: Documenting goals of care in the electronic health record is meant to relay patient preferences to other clinicians. Evaluating the content and documentation of nurse and social worker led goals of care conversations c...

Uncovering psychosocial contexts in goals of ...

Article | GAMBINO, Julia | Clinical gerontologist

OBJECTIVES: Patients often struggle with psychological and social stressors that accompany life-limiting chronic illness. Because psychosocial concerns may be conveyed through emotional sentiments, this study aimed to identify emo...

Uncovering psychosocial contexts in goals of ...

Article indépendant | GAMBINO, Julia | Clinical gerontologist

OBJECTIVES: Patients often struggle with psychological and social stressors that accompany life-limiting chronic illness. Because psychosocial concerns may be conveyed through emotional sentiments, this study aimed to identify emo...

De la même série

Hospice interventions for persons living with...

Article indépendant | LASSELL, Rebecca K. F. | Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | n°7 | vol.70

Background: Hospice care was initially designed for seriously ill individuals with cancer. Thus, the model and clinicians were geared toward caring for this population. Despite the proportion of persons living with dementia (PLWD)...

The VA life-sustaining treatment decisions in...

Article indépendant | WONG, Susan P. Y. | Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | n°9 | vol.70

Background: Documentation of patients' goals of care is integral to promoting goal-concordant care. In 2017, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) launched a system-wide initiative to standardize documentation of patients' prefe...

Fragmentation of care in the last year of lif...

Article indépendant | NOTHELLE, Stephanie | Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | n°8 | vol.70

Background: Care at the end of life is commonly fragmented; however, little is known about commonly used measures of fragmentation of care in the last year of life (LYOL). We sought to understand differences in fragmentation of ca...

Guardianship and end-of-life care for veteran...

Article indépendant | COHEN, Andrew B. | Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | n°2 | vol.69

BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Experts have suggested that patients represented by professional guardians receive higher intensity end-of-life treatment than other patients, but there is little corresponding empirical data. DESIGN: Retros...

Referral criteria to specialist palliative ca...

Article indépendant | MO, Li | Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | n°6 | vol.69

Background: Patients with dementia often have significant symptom burden and a progressive course of functional deterioration. Specialist palliative care referral may be helpful, but it is unclear who and when patients should be r...

Chargement des enrichissements...