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Put together a cause-and-effect (fishbone) diagram & identify causes in the areas of manpower, material, methods, and machinery "Why can't admitting remember to change these patients to preadmit so that we can see the information from the emergency room in their electronic record and view their current medications?" the scribe complained to the cath lab nurse. "I will never understand why it is so difficult to get cath lab patients transferred from an ED patient to preadmit." The scribe stops trying to record patient information in the electronic health record and calls the admitting department. The scribe is frustrated because admitting has not updated the patient type listed in the electronic health record. This patient was seen a few minutes ago in the ED for an acute myocardial infarction. The patient had come into Western States University Hospital with chest pain. An EKG was ordered for the patient and it showed that the patient had a STEMI. Once this diagnosis was made, the patient was emergently transferred to the cath lab. Although the electronic health record used by the facility has many features that allow care providers to access necessary patient information, the system has a few issues. The issue that caused the most headaches in the cath lab was the fact that the cath lab personnel could not view important patient information or chart new information until the admitting department changed the patient type from ED to preadmit. Although there was a way to override the system to view the necessary information, this process was also concerning. Charting within the system was not possible even with the override, and there had been some instances where the latest information from the ED was not in the system if the system had been overridden. Time frames were also problematic. Quality measures and reporting requirements necessitate accurate times. "Door-to-balloon times" are an important reporting measure. Without the ability to chart in real time, the time of arrival to the cath lab and the time the vessel was opened are not accurately reflected in the system. As Western States Hospital collects data to determine how long it takes cath lab staff to open a vessel once the patient is in the cath lab, the report is showing that it happens very quickly. It almost seems like the average time is unrealistic.
The procedure in the cath lab is that a scribe or technician is responsible for documenting everything that happens during the encounter. Without the ability to document directly into the electronic health record, the scribe or technician spends precious time contacting admitting and documenting the encounter on paper. This information must then be transferred into the electronic health record, or "back charted." At Western States Hospital the scribe calls the admitting clerk and states, "The patient from ED room five is here in the cath lab and the patient type is still set at ED. You do realize that I cannot do my job when you do not do yours, right? Why can't you admitting clerks figure out how to get these patient types changed faster and do your job so that I can do mine?" The admitting clerk responds, "I have been busy taking care of other patients and didn't realize this was the patient that was taken to the cath lab. I do have other patients to take care of besides the one that you have in the cath lab. Just override the system so that you can view the information until I get the type changed," to which the scribe states, "Truly you don't understand the ramifications of what your job entails and the problems this can cause the patient. Just make the change. Now!" The patient type is changed, and the technician is now trying to document what has happened to this patient in the cath lab from memory.
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