2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.jen.2013.10.007
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Incorporating Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment Into Emergency Nursing Workflow Using An Existing Computerized Physician Order Entry/Clinical Decision Support System

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Cited by 10 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Our ability to fully capture brief interventions may have been limited due to our reliance on clinicians' documentation in the EHR. However, the EHR methods we used to ascertain brief interventions have been previously employed in other VA studies (Williams et al, 2017a; Williams et al, 2017b; Williams et al, 2014), albeit with varying timeframes for documentation of brief interventions (Lapham et al, 2015; Williams et al, 2017b), and are similar to methods used in studies outside of the VA (Chi, Weisner, Mertens, Ross, & Sterling, 2017; Slain et al, 2014). Measurement of other outcomes besides brief interventions was also limited.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our ability to fully capture brief interventions may have been limited due to our reliance on clinicians' documentation in the EHR. However, the EHR methods we used to ascertain brief interventions have been previously employed in other VA studies (Williams et al, 2017a; Williams et al, 2017b; Williams et al, 2014), albeit with varying timeframes for documentation of brief interventions (Lapham et al, 2015; Williams et al, 2017b), and are similar to methods used in studies outside of the VA (Chi, Weisner, Mertens, Ross, & Sterling, 2017; Slain et al, 2014). Measurement of other outcomes besides brief interventions was also limited.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The number of interventions that was performed was limited compared with previous studies [5,7,10,12,13], although it was higher than that in one of the few other studies in which the ED staff performed the entire process of SBIRT, as in our study [16].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 68%
“…Nineteen articles [28e46] met inclusion criteria and were abstracted by the same authors for details about payment and financing. Only three articles specified adolescents as the focus of SBI [31,32,43], out of only eight articles that specified the population at all [31,32,35,38,40,42,43,46]. Fourteen reported on SBI in healthcare settings [28e31, 33,35e39,41e43,46], of which two included a Federally Qualified Health Center [35,36] and one was a community mental health center [43].…”
Section: Rapid Scoping Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%