• Prim Health Care Res Dev · Oct 2013

    Using timelines to depict patient journeys: a development for research methods and clinical care review.

    • Natalie Momen, Marilyn Kendall, Stephen Barclay, and Scott Murray.
    • CLAHRC End of Life Care, Institute of Public Health, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK. nataliemomen@hotmail.co.uk
    • Prim Health Care Res Dev. 2013 Oct 1; 14 (4): 403-8.

    AbstractGraphical displays of investigations are increasingly used in clinical care. Summaries of medical records for research or clinical review purposes can generate unmanageably large amounts of data, which may be helpfully summarised and displayed using timelines. During a prospective study of cancer care in primary care, care timelines were generated in Microsoft Visio, using data collected retrospectively from general practice records. Data from primary and secondary care consultations were included. Thirteen timelines were created, which proved valuable in summarising and analysing the data concerning the cases studied. Timelines provide a clear, concise way of displaying large amounts of diverse data, although some selectivity is required to facilitate interpretation. Generation of timelines in the software was time consuming: if they could be automatically generated within clinical IT systems, they would enable clinicians to generate useful summaries of care of complex cases, facilitating care reviews.

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