1. Pilot evaluation of a digital approach to occupational therapy home assessments: acceptability and efficiency compared with usual practice in a hospital.
- Author
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Spalding, Kaitlyn, Watson, Kylie, Tornatore, Giovanna, Laracy, Sue, and Doig, Emmah
- Subjects
DOCUMENTATION ,CROSS-sectional method ,RESEARCH funding ,ACCESSIBLE design ,DIGITAL health ,OCCUPATIONAL therapists ,PILOT projects ,CONTENT analysis ,DISCHARGE planning ,HOME environment ,CONFIDENCE ,MANN Whitney U Test ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,LONGITUDINAL method ,HOME remodeling ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,URBAN hospitals ,COMMUNICATION ,RESEARCH methodology ,QUALITY assurance ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DATA analysis software ,OCCUPATIONAL therapy needs assessment ,MEDICAL care costs ,TIME ,NONPARAMETRIC statistics - Abstract
Introduction: Pre-discharge home assessments by occupational therapists facilitate safe and timely discharge from hospital and are associated with better health outcomes. Digital technology offers the potential to reduce duplication of documentation and improve communication and sharing of home assessment findings. Objective: This quality improvement project evaluated time-cost; clinician satisfaction and confidence; and acceptability of the use of a digital approach to home assessments. Methods: A prospective, cross-sectional design was used to compare usual practice with the digital approach across two sub-acute wards in a large metropolitan hospital in Queensland, Australia. Time to document and conduct home assessments as well as clinician satisfaction and confidence were compared using descriptive statistics. Clinician perspectives about the home assessment approaches were collected through a survey and analyzed using content analysis. Results: Home assessment and documentation time were significantly lower for the home assessments conducted using the digital approach compared with usual practice assessments. Clinician satisfaction with using digital technology was higher. Conclusions: The introduction of this simple technology reduced clinicians' time to conduct home assessments and document home assessment reports. The project was well received by occupational therapy clinicians. http://links.lww.com/IJEBH/A187 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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