Nursing Documentation: A Program to Promote and Sustain Improvement
- 1 September 1994
- journal article
- Published by SLACK, Inc. in Journal of continuing education in nursing
- Vol. 25 (5) , 203-208
- https://doi.org/10.3928/0022-0124-19940901-05
Abstract
Pertinent, timely, and accurate nursing documentation promotes consistency in client care and effective communication among nurses and other health team members. Alternative documentation systems, continuing education efforts, and ongoing quality management activities are necessary to ensure that standards of record keeping are maintained. A pilot project using such methods was conducted on two hospital units to promote adherence to a specific documentation system. Education was integrated with peer auditing and follow-up over a 6-month period. The nursing staff significantly improved the quality of their documentation and sustained this improvement over time. Staff's knowledge about documentation improved significantly. Furthermore, there was a statistically significant decrease in documentation errors. The integration of peer auditing and continuing education enabled nurses to attain and maintain specific documentation standards.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Developing Quality DocumentationNursing Management, 1991
- Effective Peer ReviewNursing Management, 1991
- DocumentationJONA: The Journal of Nursing Administration, 1991
- A Nursing Care Monitoring and Evaluation System: Making it Work in Differentiated PracticeNursing Forum, 1991
- Nursing Process???Evaluation of DocumentationNursing Management, 1991
- CHARTING BY EXCEPTIONNursing2021, 1990
- Implementing Focus ChartingClinical Nurse Specialist, 1990
- Peer AuditingNursing Management, 1990
- Documentation Evaluation SystemNursing Management, 1987
- Focus ChartingNursing Management, 1985