The extent to which family physicians record their patients’ exercise in medical records: a scoping review
ObjectiveExercise is an effective modality for the prevention and treatment of chronic conditions and family physicians are the healthcare providers tasked to manage patients’ chronic disease status. However, little is known about the exercise documentation in family-physician records. Therefore, a...
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doaj-f8f047ea775a48af8cc3af6f0312bfc92021-07-31T15:31:34ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Open2044-60552020-02-0110210.1136/bmjopen-2019-034542The extent to which family physicians record their patients’ exercise in medical records: a scoping reviewJohn C Spence0Cliff Lindeman1Ashley McCurdy2Carminda G Lamboglia3Brendan Wohlers4Anh N Q Pham5Allison Sivak6Faculty of Kinesiology, Sport and Recreation, University of Alberta, Alberta, Edmonton, Canada1 Department of Family Medicine, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada 2 Faculty of Kinesiology, Sport, and Recreation, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada2 Faculty of Kinesiology, Sport, and Recreation, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada2 Faculty of Kinesiology, Sport, and Recreation, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada1 Department of Family Medicine, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada3 Coutts Library, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, CanadaObjectiveExercise is an effective modality for the prevention and treatment of chronic conditions and family physicians are the healthcare providers tasked to manage patients’ chronic disease status. However, little is known about the exercise documentation in family-physician records. Therefore, a scoping review was conducted to describe family-physician-recorded exercise-related advice to patients in electronic medical records.DesignScoping review.SettingPrimary care clinics.Search strategyPubMed, Medline, SPORTDiscus, Google, Dissertations & Theses Global, OCLC PapersFirst (via First Search) and included references were searched between 1 January 1990 and 10 June 2018. Extracted information included year, geographic origin, data input structure, input frequency and content of exercise inputs in family physicians’ electronic medical records. The primary outcomes are the structure, purpose and frequency of inputs.ResultsOf a possible 1758 documents, 83 remained after a title and abstract scan and 22 after a full-text review. These documents included 32 findings of physical activity/exercise medical record documentation: counselling/advising patients (50.0%), status (12.5%), embedded questionnaires (12.5%), status as a risk factor (12.5%), health promotion documentation (6.3%), inactivity status (3.1%) and grading (3.1%). The frequency of exercise inputs in primary care records vary from as low as 0.4% of patients with documentation of physical activity health promotion inputs to as high as 87.8% of patients with exercise or physical activity status recorded. The majority of included documents (63.6%) were focused on patients with identified chronic conditions.ConclusionThe findings suggest that the structure and purpose of exercise documentation is often unclear or unspecified. Studies that present exercise information from family-physician medical records tend to focus on patients with specific chronic conditions and present little detail about the field from which information was extracted. The review found that the proportion of patients with physical activity or exercise information is often less than half.https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/10/2/e034542.full |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
John C Spence Cliff Lindeman Ashley McCurdy Carminda G Lamboglia Brendan Wohlers Anh N Q Pham Allison Sivak |
spellingShingle |
John C Spence Cliff Lindeman Ashley McCurdy Carminda G Lamboglia Brendan Wohlers Anh N Q Pham Allison Sivak The extent to which family physicians record their patients’ exercise in medical records: a scoping review BMJ Open |
author_facet |
John C Spence Cliff Lindeman Ashley McCurdy Carminda G Lamboglia Brendan Wohlers Anh N Q Pham Allison Sivak |
author_sort |
John C Spence |
title |
The extent to which family physicians record their patients’ exercise in medical records: a scoping review |
title_short |
The extent to which family physicians record their patients’ exercise in medical records: a scoping review |
title_full |
The extent to which family physicians record their patients’ exercise in medical records: a scoping review |
title_fullStr |
The extent to which family physicians record their patients’ exercise in medical records: a scoping review |
title_full_unstemmed |
The extent to which family physicians record their patients’ exercise in medical records: a scoping review |
title_sort |
extent to which family physicians record their patients’ exercise in medical records: a scoping review |
publisher |
BMJ Publishing Group |
series |
BMJ Open |
issn |
2044-6055 |
publishDate |
2020-02-01 |
description |
ObjectiveExercise is an effective modality for the prevention and treatment of chronic conditions and family physicians are the healthcare providers tasked to manage patients’ chronic disease status. However, little is known about the exercise documentation in family-physician records. Therefore, a scoping review was conducted to describe family-physician-recorded exercise-related advice to patients in electronic medical records.DesignScoping review.SettingPrimary care clinics.Search strategyPubMed, Medline, SPORTDiscus, Google, Dissertations & Theses Global, OCLC PapersFirst (via First Search) and included references were searched between 1 January 1990 and 10 June 2018. Extracted information included year, geographic origin, data input structure, input frequency and content of exercise inputs in family physicians’ electronic medical records. The primary outcomes are the structure, purpose and frequency of inputs.ResultsOf a possible 1758 documents, 83 remained after a title and abstract scan and 22 after a full-text review. These documents included 32 findings of physical activity/exercise medical record documentation: counselling/advising patients (50.0%), status (12.5%), embedded questionnaires (12.5%), status as a risk factor (12.5%), health promotion documentation (6.3%), inactivity status (3.1%) and grading (3.1%). The frequency of exercise inputs in primary care records vary from as low as 0.4% of patients with documentation of physical activity health promotion inputs to as high as 87.8% of patients with exercise or physical activity status recorded. The majority of included documents (63.6%) were focused on patients with identified chronic conditions.ConclusionThe findings suggest that the structure and purpose of exercise documentation is often unclear or unspecified. Studies that present exercise information from family-physician medical records tend to focus on patients with specific chronic conditions and present little detail about the field from which information was extracted. The review found that the proportion of patients with physical activity or exercise information is often less than half. |
url |
https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/10/2/e034542.full |
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