Electronic health record competency in graduate nurses: A grounded theory study.

Joanne Weinschreider, Kelly Tenzek, Kelly Foltz-Ramos, Carla Jungquist, Jennifer A Livingston
Author Information
  1. Joanne Weinschreider: University at Buffalo, graduated Fall 22, Saint John Fisher University, School of Nursing, Director of Experiential Learning, 3690 East Ave, Rochester, NY 14618, United States of America. Electronic address: jweinsch@buffalo.edu.
  2. Kelly Tenzek: University at Buffalo, State University of New York, 323 Baldy Hall, Buffalo, NY 14260-1020, United States of America.
  3. Kelly Foltz-Ramos: School of Nursing, University at Buffalo, State University of New York, 211 Wende Hall, Buffalo, NY 14214-3079, United States of America.
  4. Carla Jungquist: School of Nursing, University at Buffalo, State University of New York, 211 Wende Hall, Buffalo, NY 14214-3079, United States of America.
  5. Jennifer A Livingston: School of Nursing, University at Buffalo, State University of New York, 211 Wende Hall, Buffalo, NY 14214-3079, United States of America.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The use of electronic health records is ubiquitous in healthcare settings, yet newly graduated nurses struggle with developing electronic health record competency prior to entry into nursing practice. Insufficient electronic health record knowledge, skills, and attitudes among newly graduated nurses are contributing to patient harm, clinical burn-out, and unsafe practices. In this study, we interviewed electronic health record educators to identify how newly graduated nurses develop electronic health record competency characteristics and to learn about their educational approaches for teaching electronic health record proficiency.
METHOD: This study used a constructive grounded theory approach to develop a theoretical model to make sense of electronic health record educators' experiences working with newly graduated nurses during electronic health record education and training sessions.
FINDINGS: Electronic health record educators found that in the newly graduated nurse population, practicing builds competency in electronic health record knowledge, skills, and attitudes. The research revealed that it is the combination of teaching through modeling, working hard as a new graduate, and understanding charting to standards requirements that impacts the development of electronic health record competency characteristics.
CONCLUSION: Electronic health record competency characteristics are developed when an educator is modeling documentation knowledge, skills, and attitudes, the newly graduated nurse is working hard to learn, and there is clarity by nursing leadership related to charting to standards requirements. It is the success or failure in these core areas that impacts a newly graduated nurse's ability to achieve electronic health record competency. A level of competency and proficiency in electronic health record is required to provide care that is safe and patient centered.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Humans
Electronic Health Records
Education, Nursing, Graduate
Grounded Theory
Delivery of Health Care
Learning
Nurses

Word Cloud

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