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Bmc Med Inform Decis · Aug 2010
Comparative StudySpeech recognition software and electronic psychiatric progress notes: physicians' ratings and preferences.
- Yaron D Derman, Tamara Arenovich, and John Strauss.
- Information Management Group, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, 1001 Queen St, West, Toronto, Ontario, M6J 1H4, Canada.
- Bmc Med Inform Decis. 2010 Aug 25; 10: 44.
BackgroundThe context of the current study was mandatory adoption of electronic clinical documentation within a large mental health care organization. Psychiatric electronic documentation has unique needs by the nature of dense narrative content. Our goal was to determine if speech recognition (SR) would ease the creation of electronic progress note (ePN) documents by physicians at our institution.MethodsSubjectsTwelve physicians had access to SR software on their computers for a period of four weeks to create ePN.MeasurementsWe examined SR software in relation to its perceived usability, data entry time savings, impact on the quality of care and quality of documentation, and the impact on clinical and administrative workflow, as compared to existing methods for data entry.Data AnalysisA series of Wilcoxon signed rank tests were used to compare pre- and post-SR measures. A qualitative study design was used.ResultsSix of twelve participants completing the study favoured the use of SR (five with SR alone plus one with SR via hand-held digital recorder) for creating electronic progress notes over their existing mode of data entry. There was no clear perceived benefit from SR in terms of data entry time savings, quality of care, quality of documentation, or impact on clinical and administrative workflow.ConclusionsAlthough our findings are mixed, SR may be a technology with some promise for mental health documentation. Future investigations of this nature should use more participants, a broader range of document types, and compare front- and back-end SR methods.
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