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Automated versus manual audit in the emergency department

Steven Doherty (Rural Clinical School, University of Newcastle, Tamworth, Australia)
Lin Davis (Hunter New England Health, Tamworth, Australia)
Paul Leschke (Nambour Health Service, Nambour, Australia)
Anna Valpiani (Nambour Health Service, Nambour, Australia)
Emma Whitely (Tamworth Rural Referral Hospital, Tamworth, Australia)
Della Yarnold (Hunter New England Health, New Lambton, Australia)
Helen Stevens (Hunter New England Health, Armidale, Australia)

International Journal of Health Care Quality Assurance

ISSN: 0952-6862

Article publication date: 3 October 2008

638

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to compare data collected by automated form processing with manual data collection for clinical indicators (CIs) in paediatric emergency medicine.

Design/methodology/approach

Paediatric patients presenting with croup, asthma, bronchiolitis, head injury and gastroenteritis in August 2006 were identified by ICD 9 coding and a traditional manual audit was performed by two data collectors. Data were collected on a total of 16 CIs for these five illnesses. Manual audit data were then compared to information collected for this same patient population using TELEform™, an automated forms processing (AFP) system that had been employed for over two years.

Findings

Teleform™ data were only available for 24 patients compared to information for 127 patients identified by ICD 9 coding and manual audit. Teleform™ data overestimated compliance with clinical guidelines by 17 percent giving an overall departmental agreement with CIs of 90.6 percent compared to 73.5 percent in the manual audit. Additionally, manual audit demonstrated that when the clinical guideline was incorporated into the clinical record, compliance was 92.5 percent compared to 51.3 percent when it was not.

Originality/value

This single center study demonstrates that data collected by AFP such as TELEform™, overestimate emergency department performance regarding CIs compliance. Departments that use automated data collection tools need to establish relationships between such data and data collected via more traditional auditing methods.

Keywords

Citation

Doherty, S., Davis, L., Leschke, P., Valpiani, A., Whitely, E., Yarnold, D. and Stevens, H. (2008), "Automated versus manual audit in the emergency department", International Journal of Health Care Quality Assurance, Vol. 21 No. 7, pp. 671-678. https://doi.org/10.1108/09526860810910140

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2008, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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