|
|
|
|
|
by 20after4
1306 days ago
|
|
Thanks for sharing! Even outside the medical field, it seems like most humans are pretty bad about both writing down and consulting notes. Even worse for the notes written by another human. We really aren't particularly good at transferring knowledge / experience and it takes a lot of effort to do a good job of it, so most people don't even make much of an effort. This really seems like a problem that still needs a lot more attention, especially in critical places like hospitals and really any long term crisis response situation where there is important knowledge gained over time with a (poorly handled) hand-off to successors. I had some exposure to formalized incident management[1] at a previous job. There, I learned a few formalities and practices that seemed valuable, especially assigning a single coordinator to be responsible for continuity of information and coordination between many independent actors over a long period. The coordinator role had explicit hand off to their successor where the stated purpose was to transfer important working knowledge and prevent the kind of problems you (and the article) describe. 1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incident_management |
|
With patient documentation specifically, what I would really love to have is a simple search mechanism for patient notes. This still wouldn’t solve the problem of getting everyone to capture the right information. But assuming the information is there, and I'm having a real hard time sticking that right arm, I would love to be able to search for "arm", "blood draw," "stick" and see what pops up. I hope it's not something I missed entirely, but I have never used an EMR with such a feature.