Clinical Taxonomy Development and Application in Spinal Cord Injury Research: The SCIRehab Project

被引:54
|
作者
Gassaway, Julie [1 ]
Whiteneck, Gale [2 ]
Dijkers, Marcel [3 ]
机构
[1] Inst Clin Outcomes Res, Salt Lake City, UT 84102 USA
[2] Craig Hosp, Englewood, CO USA
[3] Mt Sinai Sch Med, Dept Rehabil Med, New York, NY USA
来源
JOURNAL OF SPINAL CORD MEDICINE | 2009年 / 32卷 / 03期
关键词
Spinal cord injuries; Evidence-based medicine; Practice-based evidence; Rehabilitation; physical; inpatient; Outcomes research; Personal data assistant; Nursing; Occupational therapy; Physical therapy; Speech-language pathology; Therapeutic recreation; Psychology; Social work/case management; Physiatry; BLACK-BOX; STROKE REHABILITATION; OCCUPATIONAL-THERAPY; SELF-EFFICACY; INTERVENTIONS; UNPACKING; OUTCOMES; PEOPLE; PAIN;
D O I
10.1080/10790268.2009.11760780
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Background/Objective: Applying practice-based evidence research methodology to spinal cord injury (SCI) rehabilitation requires taxonomy (typology or classification) of rehabilitation interventions provided by every discipline contributing to SCI rehabilitation. The rehabilitation field currently lacks such taxonomy. Methods: SCIRehab project researchers and clinicians representing 7 rehabilitation disciplines from 6 US inpatient SCI rehabilitation facilities worked in discipline groups during 2 face-to-face meetings and weekly discipline-specific teleconferences for 9 months to identify key contributions of each discipline to SCI rehabilitation and to develop a classification of treatment interventions used by each discipline. These clinician groups were charged with designing documentation systems that collected enough details to describe treatment adequately while not imposing an unrealistic data collection burden on clinicians. Completed documentation systems were programmed onto handheld personal digital assistants (PDAs) to facilitate data entry by clinicians at the point of care. Results: Seven discipline-specific SCI rehabilitation taxonomies were developed that describe and quantify intervention activities (major categories of treatment offered by the discipline) and the activity-specific details (variables deemed important to fully describe the interventional process). Much treatment information is unique to each discipline; some is common across disciplines. Conclusions: The taxonomies provide a format with which clinicians document actual interventions performed with or for patients. The SCIRehab project has developed the first comprehensive multidisciplinary taxonomy for describing the details of the SCI rehabilitation process and designed a PDA-based documentation system based on that taxonomy that allows clinicians to describe the specifics of their interactions with their patients.
引用
收藏
页码:260 / 269
页数:10
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