Decoding oxygen prescriptions: electronic health record documentation versus patient-reported use.

IF 2.6 3区 医学 Q2 RESPIRATORY SYSTEM BMC Pulmonary Medicine Pub Date : 2024-10-08 DOI:10.1186/s12890-024-03248-7
Wilson Tang, J Smith, J Dakkak, A Balasubramanian, B Seth, C Leotta, S C Mathai, M C McCormack, S Acharya, A Calypso, S K Danoff
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Abstract

Background: Long term oxygen therapy (LTOT) is prescribed for hypoxemia in pulmonary disease. Like other medical therapies, LTOT requires a prescription documenting the dosage (flow rate) and directions (at rest, with activity) which goes to a supplier. Communication with patients regarding oxygen prescription (flow rate, frequency, directions), monitoring (pulse oximetry) and dosage adjustment (oxygen titration) differs in comparison with medication prescriptions. We examined the communication of oxygen management plans in the electronic health record (EHR), and their consistency with patient-reported LTOT use.

Study design and methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted in 71 adults with chronic lung disease on LTOT. Physician communication regarding oxygen management was obtained from the EHR. Participants were interviewed on their LTOT management plan. The information from each source was compared.

Results: The study population was, on average, 64 years, two-thirds women, and most used oxygen for over 3 years. Only 45% of both at-rest and with-activity oxygen prescriptions were documented in the Electronic Health Record (EHR). Less than 20% of prescriptions were relayed to the patient in the after-visit summary. Of those with EHR-documented oxygen prescriptions, 44% of patients adhered to prescribed oxygen flow rates. Nearly all patients used a pulse oximeter (96%).

Interpretation: We identified significant gaps in communication of oxygen management plans from provider to patient. Even when the oxygen prescription was clearly documented, there were differences in patient-reported oxygen management. Critical gaps in oxygen therapy result from the lack of consistent documentation of oxygen prescriptions in the EHR and patient-facing documents. Addressing these issues systematically may improve home oxygen management.

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解码氧气处方:电子健康记录文件与患者报告的使用情况。
背景:长期氧疗(LTOT)是治疗肺部疾病低氧血症的处方。与其他医疗方法一样,长期氧疗也需要处方,处方上要记录氧的剂量(流速)和方向(休息时、活动时),并将处方交给供应商。与药物处方相比,与患者就氧气处方(流速、频率、方向)、监测(脉搏血氧仪)和剂量调整(氧气滴定)进行的沟通有所不同。我们研究了电子健康记录(EHR)中氧气管理计划的沟通情况,以及其与患者报告的 LTOT 使用情况的一致性:研究设计:我们对 71 名使用低氧同位素治疗的慢性肺病成人进行了横断面研究。从电子病历中获取了医生在氧气管理方面的沟通信息。对参与者进行了关于其 LTOT 管理计划的访谈。对每个来源的信息进行比较:研究对象平均年龄为 64 岁,三分之二为女性,大多数人使用氧气超过 3 年。电子健康记录(EHR)中记录的静息状态和活动状态下的氧气处方仅占 45%。只有不到 20% 的处方在诊后总结中转达给了患者。在电子病历记录的氧气处方中,44% 的患者遵守了规定的氧气流速。几乎所有患者都使用了脉搏血氧计(96%):我们发现,医疗服务提供者与患者之间在氧气管理计划的沟通方面存在很大差距。即使氧气处方有明确记录,患者报告的氧气管理情况也存在差异。由于电子病历和面向患者的文件中缺乏一致的氧疗处方记录,导致氧疗方面存在重大差距。系统地解决这些问题可以改善家庭氧气管理。
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来源期刊
BMC Pulmonary Medicine
BMC Pulmonary Medicine RESPIRATORY SYSTEM-
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
3.20%
发文量
423
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: BMC Pulmonary Medicine is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that considers articles on all aspects of the prevention, diagnosis and management of pulmonary and associated disorders, as well as related molecular genetics, pathophysiology, and epidemiology.
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