New Web-Based System for Recording Public Health Nursing Practices and Determining Best Practices: Protocol of an Exploratory Sequential Design

Author:

Yoshioka-Maeda KyokoORCID,Matsumoto HiroshigeORCID,Honda ChikakoORCID,Shiomi MisaORCID,Taira KazuyaORCID,Hosoya NorikoORCID,Sato MikiORCID,Sumikawa YukaORCID,Fujii HitoshiORCID,Miura TakahiroORCID

Abstract

Background Digitalization and information and communication technology (ICT) promote effective, efficient individual and community care. Clinical terminology or taxonomy and its framework visualize individual patients’ and nursing interventions’ classifications to improve their outcomes and care quality. Public health nurses (PHNs) provide lifelong individual care and community-based activities while developing projects to promote community health. The linkage between these practices and clinical assessment remains tacit. Owing to Japan’s lagging digitalization, supervisory PHNs face difficulties in monitoring each department’s activities and staff members’ performances and competencies. Randomly selected prefectural or municipal PHNs collect data on daily activities and required hours every 3 years. No study has adopted these data for public health nursing care management. PHNs need ICTs to manage their work and improve care quality; it may help identify health needs and suggest best public health nursing practices. Objective We aim to develop and validate an electronic recording and management system for evaluating different public health nursing practice needs, including individual care, community-based activities, and project development, and for determining their best practices. Methods We used a 2-phase exploratory sequential design (in Japan) comprising 2 phases. In phase 1, we developed the system’s architectural framework and a hypothetical algorithm to determine the need for practice review through a literature review and a panel discussion. We designed a cloud-based practice recording system, including a daily record system and a termly review system. The panels included 3 supervisors who were prior PHNs at the prefectural or municipal government, and 1 was the executive director of the Japanese Nursing Association. The panels agreed that the draft architectural framework and hypothetical algorithm were reasonable. The system was not linked to electronic nursing records to protect patient privacy. Phase 2 validated each item through interviews with supervisory PHNs using a web-based meeting system. A nationwide survey was distributed to supervisory and midcareer PHNs across local governments. Results This study was funded in March 2022 and approved by all ethics review boards from July to September and November 2022. Data collection was completed in January 2023. Five PHNs participated in the interviews. In the nationwide survey, responses were obtained from 177 local governments of supervisory PHNs and 196 midcareer ones. Conclusions This study will reveal PHNs’ tacit knowledge about their practices, assess needs for different approaches, and determine best practices. Additionally, this study will promote ICT-based practices in public health nursing. The system will enable PHNs to record their daily activities and share them with their supervisors to reflect on and improve their performance, and the quality of care to promote health equity in community settings. The system will support supervisory PHNs in creating performance benchmarks for their staff and departments to promote evidence-based human resource development and management. Trial Registration UMIN-ICDR UMIN000049411; https://tinyurl.com/yfvxscfm International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID) DERR1-10.2196/45342

Publisher

JMIR Publications Inc.

Subject

General Medicine

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