Focus on your patients, not charting. Patient monitors, ventilators, medical devices streaming up to one hundred parameters (i.e., SpO2) per second for ultimate high-resolution physiologic data recording.
Consider the time spent on plotting vital signs and handwriting comments. Don’t use your critical time on these tasks.
Didn’t have enough time to look at the patient monitor? Take advantage of continuous high resolution electronic data capture.
No need to look at five minute averages. Recordation captures a full data set every second for critical analysis of events.
Let Recordation perform tedious tasks like data capture, demographics aggregation and documentation validation.
Handwritten anesthetic records are unlikely or unable to represent physiologic data with consistent accuracy at high resolution. Many electronic anesthesia recording systems capture data and save averaged values over five minute periods.
Retrospective analysis of intraoperative events may be challenging with handwritten records or averaged electronic data, and may lead to inaccurate conclusions or missed learning opportunities from quality assurance or medicolegal investigations.
Recordation Workstation captures and saves up to one hundred numeric parameters at a typical frequency of once per second; this can prove critical in analyzing intraoperative events.
In the following example, Recordation Workstation show the same event in different ways with vital signs captured around an injection of local anesthetic with epinephrine.
Recordation Workstation, by capturing and saving physiologic data at the highest resolution, typically captures up to one hundred numeric parameters per second, can be used to understand more reliably intraoperative events.
Time consuming. Tedious. Inaccurate. Illegible. Distracting.
Unable to be validated with respect to accuracy, time of entry of individual documentation elements.
Rely on the clinician’s viewing and interpretation of patient monitor.
Limited simultaneous access to handwritten information by others.
Loss of clinically relevant information.[reference]
Subject to medicolegal challenge.
Lack electronically extractable meaningful data.
More importantly, what is the cost of not having easily accessible electronic anesthesia information?
Despite the presence of low cost computer technology, the adoption of automated anesthetic recording systems has been slow.
Patient monitors have undergone significant evolution, although for many years even some older models have been able to output data electronically at high rates.
Anesthesia information recording systems must interface with many different physiologic models, often in the same operating room suites, using communication protocols that may no longer be supported or are difficult to maintain in modern computer operating systems and environments.
Recordation has the ability to obtain high quality data at high acquisition rates from older and more modern models using a variety of communications protocols. Let us know what monitoring equipment you have in your operating rooms!
Good medical care that is documented appropriately is the easiest to defend.
Arguments have been made that capturing vital signs electronically subjects the user to increased medicolegal liability. However just as a pilot’s flight recorder can be used retrospectively to understand the flight crew’s environment and how it might have been experienced, so too can a high resolution electronic anesthesia record such as those from Recordation Workstation be used for meaningful analyses and data aggregation.
While Recordation Workstation presents most data averaged over 5 minute intervals, because the original raw data is saved with each anesthetic record, it may be reformatted at a later time to display at one minute or one second intervals for closer scrutiny.
Given that written records may pose legibility and validation challenges, the advantages become clear of appropriate medical care that is documented accurately with automated high resolution physiologic data.
Discuss your practice and your facility with our experts.
Recordation Perioperative Information Systems
30 Boston Post Road
Wayland, MA 01778
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