90% of AHPs spend 1-3 hours a day on documentation
Inspired by the experience and learning points from our interview with Cambridgeshire Community Services NHS Trust’s DynamicHealth we recently co-hosted an @WeAHP tweet chat which drilled further down into some of the challenges AHPs face in creating, reviewing, updating, managing and sharing clinical documentation. We wanted to see how their documentation experience compared that of the nursing community which we explored last year in a roundtable discussion and follow-up report.
The discussion was interesting for a number of reasons. We discovered that AHPs’ work is more varied and happens in a wide variety of settings. This is not surprising when one considers that there are at least 14 different professional groups under the AHP umbrella ranging from art and drama therapists to occupational therapists and physiotherapists.
In common with nurses there is a requirement to record treatment plans. This means AHPs spend a significant part of their day writing reports with, according to a poll carried out during the tweet chat, almost 50% of respondents spending one to two hours a day on documentation.
Differences appeared to be that there are fewer templates and standardised care plan tools than are used in nursing and that reports are often written in front of patients. This poses a challenge in terms of maintaining connection and eye-contact with the patient.
“I want to be engaged with the patient sitting in front of me, but at the same time I need to make note of what they’re saying. I try to be mindful not to look at my screen too much while we talk!”
Influence the conversation!
We will be exploring more of these challenges in our forthcoming roundtable taking place in April. Amongst the questions we will be asking are where support in managing clinical documentation might come from and whether technology (such as speech recognition software) could help. It has certainly been shown to make a difference in a variety of different settings.
Our aim is to
- share the experiences of common challenges amongst the 14 professional groups
- support AHPs learn from others, finding ways they can have greater confidence in the systems and processes around clinical documentation.
- explore whether there are opportunities for AHPs to influence the design and choice of electronic patient record systems (EPRs).
If you are working as an AHP and would like to contribute to the discussion or take part in the roundtable discussion on 18th April at Horizons in Leeds, please contact me for further details.