At the center of the galaxy: the integrative role of medical progress notes

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperResearchpeer-review

Standard

At the center of the galaxy : the integrative role of medical progress notes. / Bansler, Jørgen P.; Havn, Erling C.; Mønsted, Troels; Schmidt, Kjeld.

2013. Paper presented at 4th International Workshop on Infrastructures for Healthcare, Tromsø, Norway.

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Bansler, JP, Havn, EC, Mønsted, T & Schmidt, K 2013, 'At the center of the galaxy: the integrative role of medical progress notes', Paper presented at 4th International Workshop on Infrastructures for Healthcare, Tromsø, Norway, 13/06/2013 - 14/06/2013. <http://site.uit.no/infrahealth/files/2013/06/Bansler_3.pdf>

APA

Bansler, J. P., Havn, E. C., Mønsted, T., & Schmidt, K. (2013). At the center of the galaxy: the integrative role of medical progress notes. Paper presented at 4th International Workshop on Infrastructures for Healthcare, Tromsø, Norway. http://site.uit.no/infrahealth/files/2013/06/Bansler_3.pdf

Vancouver

Bansler JP, Havn EC, Mønsted T, Schmidt K. At the center of the galaxy: the integrative role of medical progress notes. 2013. Paper presented at 4th International Workshop on Infrastructures for Healthcare, Tromsø, Norway.

Author

Bansler, Jørgen P. ; Havn, Erling C. ; Mønsted, Troels ; Schmidt, Kjeld. / At the center of the galaxy : the integrative role of medical progress notes. Paper presented at 4th International Workshop on Infrastructures for Healthcare, Tromsø, Norway.4 p.

Bibtex

@conference{febe830d1afe4eacb5f95345c8670450,
title = "At the center of the galaxy: the integrative role of medical progress notes",
abstract = "Studies of the medical record have generally taken the progress notes as just one entity among many. In contrast, we argue that progress notes are a coordinative artifact of a rather special kind that constitute the core of the medical record, in which physicians organize and summarize the immense amount of data that is available in the modern hospital environment. The study we report indicates that narrative plays a fundamental role in the way physicians document their findings and thoughts in the progress notes, because it allows them to not only record “facts” but also – by filtering, interpreting, organizing and qualifying information – to impose some order on events. Furthermore, we show how physicians use the progress notes to question available information, speculate about possible or plausible reasons for why something has happened, and suggest appropriate lines of action. This insight has important implications for the design of EMR systems.",
author = "Bansler, {J{\o}rgen P.} and Havn, {Erling C.} and Troels M{\o}nsted and Kjeld Schmidt",
year = "2013",
language = "English",
note = "null ; Conference date: 13-06-2013 Through 14-06-2013",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - At the center of the galaxy

AU - Bansler, Jørgen P.

AU - Havn, Erling C.

AU - Mønsted, Troels

AU - Schmidt, Kjeld

N1 - Conference code: 4

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - Studies of the medical record have generally taken the progress notes as just one entity among many. In contrast, we argue that progress notes are a coordinative artifact of a rather special kind that constitute the core of the medical record, in which physicians organize and summarize the immense amount of data that is available in the modern hospital environment. The study we report indicates that narrative plays a fundamental role in the way physicians document their findings and thoughts in the progress notes, because it allows them to not only record “facts” but also – by filtering, interpreting, organizing and qualifying information – to impose some order on events. Furthermore, we show how physicians use the progress notes to question available information, speculate about possible or plausible reasons for why something has happened, and suggest appropriate lines of action. This insight has important implications for the design of EMR systems.

AB - Studies of the medical record have generally taken the progress notes as just one entity among many. In contrast, we argue that progress notes are a coordinative artifact of a rather special kind that constitute the core of the medical record, in which physicians organize and summarize the immense amount of data that is available in the modern hospital environment. The study we report indicates that narrative plays a fundamental role in the way physicians document their findings and thoughts in the progress notes, because it allows them to not only record “facts” but also – by filtering, interpreting, organizing and qualifying information – to impose some order on events. Furthermore, we show how physicians use the progress notes to question available information, speculate about possible or plausible reasons for why something has happened, and suggest appropriate lines of action. This insight has important implications for the design of EMR systems.

M3 - Paper

Y2 - 13 June 2013 through 14 June 2013

ER -

ID: 49100130