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. 2013 Jun;35(12):1033-8.
doi: 10.3109/09638288.2012.717585. Epub 2012 Oct 17.

Interdisciplinary communication in inpatient rehabilitation facility: evidence of under-documentation of spatial neglect after stroke

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Interdisciplinary communication in inpatient rehabilitation facility: evidence of under-documentation of spatial neglect after stroke

Peii Chen et al. Disabil Rehabil. 2013 Jun.

Abstract

Purpose: Spatial neglect commonly occurs after stroke and predicts poor rehabilitation outcomes. However, this disorder is under-recognized in clinical practices, which may result from the failure to document its presence. This study aimed to identify the predictors for documentation of spatial neglect in inpatient rehabilitation facilities.

Method: We performed a comprehensive chart review to investigate whether the presence of spatial neglect was documented in 74 neglect patients' clinical notes recorded by physicians, nurses, or occupational therapists (OTs), or in team conference notes. Independent variables included neglect severity, length of stay, Functional Independence Measure at admission and discharge.

Results: Of the 74 neglect patients, 75.7% were documented by OTs, 63.5% by physicians, and 17.6% by nurses. Although 93.2% of neglect patients were recognized by at least one clinician group, only 31.1% were discussed in multidisciplinary team conferences. Neglect patients who were documented by physicians were more likely to be documented in team conferences. While no factors predicted whether a neglect patient would be documented by nurses or OTs, we found significant predictors for neglect documentation in physician and team conference notes. The odds of being documented by physicians were increasingly greater with poorer efficiency of cognitive rehabilitation (odds ratio = 0.70). The odds of being discussed in team conferences were increasingly greater with more severe neglect (odds ratio = 0.98), and with longer stay in hospitalization (odds ratio = 1.06).

Conclusions: Multidisciplinary care may not involve as much interdisciplinary communication as needed to document important disease states. Stroke rehabilitation professionals should be able to recognize spatial neglect independently and document it consistently.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of Interest: This work was supported by the Kessler Foundation, the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (Chen, 1R03HD063177, PI: Chen) and the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (Chen, R01 NS055808, PI: Barrett). The authors declared no conflict of interest.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Examples of spatial neglect after a right brain stroke are shown in performance in (A) line cancellation, (B) line bisection, (C) free clock drawing, and (D) figure copying. In each of these, the patient’s inattention to the left side of their drawing task is evidence of their inability to attend to the left side of space, a hallmark of spatial neglect.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Percentages of neglect patients documented in physician, nurse, OT (occupational therapist), team conference records. The “overall” bar represents the percentage of neglect patients being recognized for the disorder in any one of the four clinicians’ notes.

References

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