1. Clinicians' actions associated with the successful patient care process: a content analysis of interviews with paediatric occupational therapists.
- Author
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Kolehmainen, Niina, Duncan, Edward A. S., and Francis, Jill J.
- Subjects
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OCCUPATIONAL therapy for children , *PEDIATRICS , *INTERVIEWING , *FISHER exact test , *CHI-squared test , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding , *PATIENT care , *CONTENT analysis , *DATA analysis software , *STATISTICAL sampling , *OCCUPATIONAL therapists , *SECONDARY analysis - Abstract
Purpose: Clinicians' actions impact the patient care process and pathway. This study identified clinicians' actions associated with successful care processes in one community healthcare setting, children's occupational therapy. Method: A secondary analysis in a form of a quantitative content analysis was conducted of 47 interview transcripts, describing outcomes and therapists' (n = 25) self-reported actions in 25 'successful' and 22 'unsuccessful' care processes. The successful processes were those with positive outcomes (clear and coherent process with easy discharge; achieved patient goals and positive patient-clinician relationships). The transcripts were coded for presence of therapists' actions and non-actions using content analysis; and actions associated with success of the process were identified by Pearson Chi-square test. Results: In total 207 actions were identified. These clustered around six areas: assessment, setting goals and planning actions, treatment, review, discharging, and managing processes and relationships. The key actions associated with successful processes were: gather perspectives from others at assessment (χ2 = 6.65, p < 0.01); identify therapy goals (13.16, p < 0.01); agree/communicate plans, roles and responsibilities (9.10, p < 0.01); involve the child and parents in treatment (6.36, p = 0.01); adapt physical environment (6.01, p = 0.01) and make comparisons between the baseline, current and target levels when reviewing progress (6.36, p = 0.01). Conclusions: The actions identified are congruent with literatures about patient involvement and goal achievement. Specific hypotheses about the mechanisms by which the identified actions may relate to care process are presented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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