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The impact structured patient assessment frameworks have on patient care: an integrative review
Author(s) -
Munroe Belinda,
Curtis Kate,
Considine Julie,
Buckley Thomas
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of clinical nursing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.94
H-Index - 102
eISSN - 1365-2702
pISSN - 0962-1067
DOI - 10.1111/jocn.12226
Subject(s) - patient assessment , medicine , documentation , patient satisfaction , patient care , medline , nursing , computer science , political science , law , programming language
Aims and objectives To evaluate structured patient assessment frameworks' impact on patient care. Background Accurate patient assessment is imperative to determine the status and needs of the patient and the delivery of appropriate patient care. Nurses must be highly skilled in conducting timely and accurate patient assessments to overcome environmental obstacles and deliver quality and safe patient care. A structured approach to patient assessment is widely accepted in everyday clinical practice, yet little is known about the impact structured patient assessment frameworks have on patient care. Design Integrative review. Methods An electronic database search was conducted using C umulative I ndex to N ursing and A llied H ealth L iterature, M edical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System, P ub M ed and P ro Q uest D issertations and T heses. The reference sections of textbooks and journal articles on patient assessment were manually searched for further studies. A comprehensive peer review screening process was undertaken. Research studies were selected that evaluated the impact structured patient assessment frameworks have on patient care. Studies were included if frameworks were designed for use by paramedics, nurses or medical practitioners working in prehospital or acute in‐hospital settings. Results Twelve studies met the inclusion criteria. There were no studies that evaluate the impact of a generic nursing assessment framework on patient care. The use of a structured patient assessment framework improved clinician performance of patient assessment. Limited evidence was found to support other aspects of patient care including documentation, communication, care implementation, patient and clinician satisfaction, and patient outcomes. Conclusion Structured patient assessment frameworks enhance clinician performance of patient assessment and hold the potential to improve patient care and outcomes; however, further research is required to address these evidence gaps, particularly in nursing. Relevance to clinical practice Acute care clinicians should consider using structured patient assessment frameworks in clinical practice to enhance their performance of patient assessment.