Self‐care nursing interventions: A qualitative study into electronic health records’ contents

Author:

Queirós Carmen123ORCID,Paiva e Silva Maria Antónia Taveira Cruz45,Gomes João12ORCID,Neves Hugo2367ORCID,Cruz Inês145ORCID,Brito Alice45ORCID,Cardoso Alexandrina45ORCID,Pereira Filipe45ORCID

Affiliation:

1. PhD student, Abel Salazar Institute of Biomedical Sciences University of Porto Porto Portugal

2. Invited Researcher CIDESI‐ESEP: ICN‐Accredited Centre for Information Systems and ICNP Research and Development of Nursing School of Porto Porto Portugal

3. Researcher Health Sciences Research Unit: Nursing (UICISA: E) Coimbra Nursing School (ESEnfC) Coimbra Portugal

4. Assistant Professor Nursing School of Porto Porto Portugal

5. Researcher CIDESI‐ESEP: ICN‐Accredited Centre for Information Systems and ICNP Research and Development of Nursing School of Porto Porto Portugal

6. PhD student Universidade Católica Portuguesa, Institute of Health Sciences Porto Portugal

7. Assistant Professor Nursing School of Coimbra Coimbra Portugal

Abstract

AbstractAimsThis study aims to (1) analyse all self‐care–related interventions Portuguese nurses documented, (2) determine potential issues that may impair semantic interoperability and (3) propose a new set of interventions representing nursing actions regarding self‐care that may integrate any HER application.BackgroundAs populations age and chronic diseases increase, self‐care concerns rise. Individuals who seek healthcare, regardless of context, need prompt access to accurate health information. Healthcare professionals need to understand the information in all places where care is provided, creating the need for semantic interoperability within electronic health records.MethodsA qualitative descriptive and exploratory study was conducted in two phases: (1) a content analysis of nursing interventions e‐documentation and (2) a focus group with fifteen registered nurses exploring latent criteria or insights gleaned from the findings of content analysis. The COREQ statement was used to guide research reporting.ResultsWe extracted 1529 nursing intervention sentences from the electronic health records and created 209 intervention categories. We identified the main issues with semantic interoperability in nursing intervention identification.ConclusionAccording to the findings, nurses cooperate with clients, offering physical aid and encouraging them to overcome functional limitations to self‐care tasks hampered by their conditions.Implications for nursing policy and health policyThis article provides evidence to warn policy makers against decisions to use locally customised electronic health records, as well as evidence on the importance of policy promoting the adoption of a nursing ontology for electronic health records. And, as a result, the harmonisation and effective provision of high‐quality nursing care and the reduction of healthcare costs across nations.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Nursing

Reference40 articles.

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2. Content analysis. Edições 70, Lisboa;Bardin L.;(in Portuguese),2018

3. Medical informatics and digital health multilingual ontology (MIMO): A tool to improve international collaborations

4. Nursing informatics core competencies for Portugal;Cardoso A.;HIMSS,2015

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