Background: Healthcare systems worldwide have adopted the electronic medical record (EMR). EMRs are an efficient method of interprofessional communication, and can improve data availability for secondary research purposes. The discharge summary (DS) is a crucial document for both interprofessional communication, and coding of data for research purposes. We aimed to assess the completeness of our EMRs by assessing the presence of a DS in the EMR. Additionally, we evaluated the presence of indicators for a missing DS. Method: A retrospective chart review was conducted on 3,011 inpatient charts from 3 hospitals in Calgary, Alberta Canada. 893 charts were missing an electronic DS. A 10% sample was drawn to assess for presence of a paper DS. A list of variables was compiled to assess for association between patient and hospital characteristics, patient comorbidities, and the absence of an electronic DS. A Chi-square test, Fisher's test and logistic regression were conducted to assess for associations. Results: The univariate analyses showed that age, being a surgical patient, a Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI) of 1, as well as patients with myocardial infarctions, congestive heart failure, cerebrovascular disease, dementia, chronic pulmonary disease, diabetes, and renal disease were associated with a missing DS. The multivariate logistic regression showed that those that were middle aged, surgical patients, or with fewer comorbidities were more likely to have a missing DS. Within the 10% sample, approximately 50% of all patients were from a surgical department, all of which were missing both electronic and paper discharge summaries. Conclusion: Our study is the first to describe indicators associated with missing electronic discharge summaries. There is a modern day propensity for adoption of the EMR across healthcare systems worldwide. The EMR, especially the DS, is used for the improvement of interprofessional communication, patient outcomes, and data quality. Therefore, the implications of an incomplete EMR are widespread. Our findings will caution future researchers using EMR data about the potential for incomplete data, particularly for patients who are surgical, middle aged, and have fewer comorbidities. Additionally, our study highlights the need for further investigation into the lack of discharge summaries in surgical units.
Autologous skin grafting was developed more than 3500 years ago. Several approaches and techniques have been discovered and established in burn care since then. Great achievements were made during the 19th and 20th century. Many of these techniques are still part of the surgical burn care. Today, autologous skin grafting is still considered to be the gold standard for burn wound coverage. The present paper gives an overview about the evolution of skin grafting and its usage in burn care nowadays.
Background Tumor boards (TB) play an important role to formulate a management plan for the treatment of patients with a malignancy. Recent evidence suggests that optimally functioning teams (teamwork, communication and decision making) are major prerequisites to conduct efficient TB meetings. The aims of this study were i) to use a readily published tool as a template for the development of a teamwork perspective extended assessment tool and ii) to evaluate the tool in a feasibility study by clinical and non-clinical observers. Methods A systematic literature search in four databases revealed the “Metric for the Observation of Decision-making (MODe)” to be consistently used. MODe served as a template for the clinical evaluation, additional, notably teamwork items were integrated, and the resulting tool was tested in a feasibility study in TBs by clinical and non-clinical observers. The percentage of agreement between observers was assessed in a two-step approach: first, agreement of raters on discussion of items by TB members, and second, agreement of raters based on ordinal scale. Results In total, 244 patients were discussed in 27 TB sessions, thereof 136 (56%) fast track cases and 108 (44%) complex cases. In 228 (93%) of all cases an agreement for recommendation of a treatment plan was reached. Observers showed in general high agreement on discussion of the items. For the majority of items, the percentage of agreement between the different pairs of rater was similar and mostly high. Conclusion A newly developed TB team performance tool using MODe as a template was piloted in a German-speaking country and enabled the assessment of specialized multidisciplinary teams with a special focus on teamwork patterns. The developed assessment tool requires evaluation in a larger collective for validation, and additional assessment whether it can be applied equally by non-clinicians and clinicians.
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