Implementation of iPad for Electronic Charting

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Background Nurses have long been known for their attention to patient care. The reason many nurses have entered this profession is due to their desire to care for people. The overwhelming responsibilities of documentation, chart reviews, verifying orders and medications, monitoring lab results, among others, leaves the direct care of the patient to another, possibly unqualified, staff member. Bolton, Gassert, and Cipriano (2008) estimate that a mere 23-30% of a nurse’s day is spent providing care to a patient. This leaves the greater part of a 12-hour shift performing some kind of paperwork. In fact, the inability to provide more patient care has been cited as a reason many nurses leave their job, and the profession altogether (Bolton et al., 2008). The task of documentation is vital to nursing practice. Many times, however, this documentation is repeated in different areas of a patient’s chart. DiPietro et al. (2008) reported that 40% of the written documentation done by nurses was on personal paper at the patient’s bedside. This had to be copied into the formal patient record at a later time, resulting in double documentation. The reason nurses are forced to use this method of documentation instead of transcribing assessments directly into the chart is that this vital record of the patient’s information is often not readily available. Because several disciplines of the healthcare team require the chart throughout the day, there is no guarantee as to when the nurse may actually have access to it. Additionally, in almost all hospitals that utilize paper charting, the chart must travel with the patient when he or she leaves the floor for testing or procedures. This creates another roadblock to all members of the healthcare tea... ... middle of paper ... ...ledge. Sudburry, MA: Jones and Bartlett. Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations. (2002, August). Health care at the crossroads: Strategies for addressing the evolving nursing crisis. (White Paper). Washington, D. C. Ketchum, B. (2008). IT equals better patient care? Nursing Management, 39, 21. doi:10.1097/01.NUMA.0000320634.89059.9a Office for Civil Rights (2003, May). Summary of the HIPAA privacy rule: HIPAA compliance assistance. [Privacy Brief]. Retrieved from the Department of Health and Human Services website: http://www.hhs.gov/ocr/privacy/hipaa/understanding/summary/privacysummary.pdf Thede, L. Q. & Sewell, J. P. (2010). The informatics discipline. In L. Q. Thede & J. P. Sewell (Eds.). Informatics and nursing: Competencies and applications (3rd ed., pp. 313-316). Philadelphia, PA: Wolters-Kluwer/Lippincott, Williams, & Wilkins.

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