Presentation of body mass index within an electronic health record to improve weight assessment and counselling in children and adolescents

<strong>Background</strong> Assessment of weight and counselling on nutrition and physical activity is infrequently conducted during well child visits, despite recent expert recommendations. <strong>Objective</strong> We investigated whether automatic calculation of body mass...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ulfat Shaikh, Rachel Nelson, Daniel Tancredi, Robert Byrd
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT 2010-12-01
Series:Journal of Innovation in Health Informatics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hijournal.bcs.org/index.php/jhi/article/view/779
id doaj-3291115586b94b8bb43fd339fed6aad2
record_format Article
spelling doaj-3291115586b94b8bb43fd339fed6aad22020-11-24T22:38:41ZengBCS, The Chartered Institute for ITJournal of Innovation in Health Informatics2058-45552058-45632010-12-0118423524410.14236/jhi.v18i4.779721Presentation of body mass index within an electronic health record to improve weight assessment and counselling in children and adolescentsUlfat ShaikhRachel NelsonDaniel TancrediRobert Byrd<strong>Background</strong> Assessment of weight and counselling on nutrition and physical activity is infrequently conducted during well child visits, despite recent expert recommendations. <strong>Objective</strong> We investigated whether automatic calculation of body mass index (BMI) in an electronic health record improved assessment of weight and counselling on nutrition and physical activity. <strong>Methods</strong> Retrospective review of well child visit records of children between two and 18 years of age (n=550) before and after implementation of an electronic health record system at an academic medical centre's paediatric clinic. Body mass index was automatically calculated and presented within the electronic health record. We measured clinicians' documentation of assessment of weight status, and assessment of and counselling for nutrition and physical activity risk factors. <strong>Results</strong> Documentation of assessment of BMI and weight status did not increase. There were no consistent increases in assessment for or counselling on specific nutrition and physical activity behaviours, except with respect to high calorie food intake. Although overall assessment of physical activity decreased, physical activity counselling significantly increased. Documentation of the presence of highrisk family history increased significantly; the provision of counselling for high-risk family history did not show any corresponding increase. Patients with higher BMI percentile scores were more completely assessed for weight status. Completeness of weight status assessment was associated with increased counselling for nutrition and physical activity. <strong>Conclusions</strong> Passive changes, such as automatic calculation of BMI, are insufficient to result in systematic improvements in assessment of weight and counselling for nutrition and physical activity.http://hijournal.bcs.org/index.php/jhi/article/view/779adolescentassessmentbody mass indexchildcomputerised medical record systemcounsellingdiagnosisdocumentationmedical recordsobesityoverweightpaediatricsprimary health carequality of health care
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ulfat Shaikh
Rachel Nelson
Daniel Tancredi
Robert Byrd
spellingShingle Ulfat Shaikh
Rachel Nelson
Daniel Tancredi
Robert Byrd
Presentation of body mass index within an electronic health record to improve weight assessment and counselling in children and adolescents
Journal of Innovation in Health Informatics
adolescent
assessment
body mass index
child
computerised medical record system
counselling
diagnosis
documentation
medical records
obesity
overweight
paediatrics
primary health care
quality of health care
author_facet Ulfat Shaikh
Rachel Nelson
Daniel Tancredi
Robert Byrd
author_sort Ulfat Shaikh
title Presentation of body mass index within an electronic health record to improve weight assessment and counselling in children and adolescents
title_short Presentation of body mass index within an electronic health record to improve weight assessment and counselling in children and adolescents
title_full Presentation of body mass index within an electronic health record to improve weight assessment and counselling in children and adolescents
title_fullStr Presentation of body mass index within an electronic health record to improve weight assessment and counselling in children and adolescents
title_full_unstemmed Presentation of body mass index within an electronic health record to improve weight assessment and counselling in children and adolescents
title_sort presentation of body mass index within an electronic health record to improve weight assessment and counselling in children and adolescents
publisher BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT
series Journal of Innovation in Health Informatics
issn 2058-4555
2058-4563
publishDate 2010-12-01
description <strong>Background</strong> Assessment of weight and counselling on nutrition and physical activity is infrequently conducted during well child visits, despite recent expert recommendations. <strong>Objective</strong> We investigated whether automatic calculation of body mass index (BMI) in an electronic health record improved assessment of weight and counselling on nutrition and physical activity. <strong>Methods</strong> Retrospective review of well child visit records of children between two and 18 years of age (n=550) before and after implementation of an electronic health record system at an academic medical centre's paediatric clinic. Body mass index was automatically calculated and presented within the electronic health record. We measured clinicians' documentation of assessment of weight status, and assessment of and counselling for nutrition and physical activity risk factors. <strong>Results</strong> Documentation of assessment of BMI and weight status did not increase. There were no consistent increases in assessment for or counselling on specific nutrition and physical activity behaviours, except with respect to high calorie food intake. Although overall assessment of physical activity decreased, physical activity counselling significantly increased. Documentation of the presence of highrisk family history increased significantly; the provision of counselling for high-risk family history did not show any corresponding increase. Patients with higher BMI percentile scores were more completely assessed for weight status. Completeness of weight status assessment was associated with increased counselling for nutrition and physical activity. <strong>Conclusions</strong> Passive changes, such as automatic calculation of BMI, are insufficient to result in systematic improvements in assessment of weight and counselling for nutrition and physical activity.
topic adolescent
assessment
body mass index
child
computerised medical record system
counselling
diagnosis
documentation
medical records
obesity
overweight
paediatrics
primary health care
quality of health care
url http://hijournal.bcs.org/index.php/jhi/article/view/779
work_keys_str_mv AT ulfatshaikh presentationofbodymassindexwithinanelectronichealthrecordtoimproveweightassessmentandcounsellinginchildrenandadolescents
AT rachelnelson presentationofbodymassindexwithinanelectronichealthrecordtoimproveweightassessmentandcounsellinginchildrenandadolescents
AT danieltancredi presentationofbodymassindexwithinanelectronichealthrecordtoimproveweightassessmentandcounsellinginchildrenandadolescents
AT robertbyrd presentationofbodymassindexwithinanelectronichealthrecordtoimproveweightassessmentandcounsellinginchildrenandadolescents
_version_ 1725712466571165696