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First published April 24, 2008 as JAMIA PrePrint; doi:10.1197/jamia.M2404
Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association 2008;15(4):534-541
© 2008 American Medical Informatics Association


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Submitted on February 14, 2007
Accepted on March 10, 2008

Preliminary Development of the Physician Documentation Quality Instrument

Peter D. Stetson MD, MA1*, Frances P. Morrison MD, MPH2, Suzanne Bakken RN, DNSc3, and Stephen B. Johnson PhD2

Affiliation of the authors: 1 Department of Biomedical Informatics, Columbia University, New York, NY; Department of Medicine, Columbia University, New York, NY ; 2 Department of Biomedical Informatics, Columbia University, New York, NY ; 3 Department of Biomedical Informatics, Columbia University, New York, NY; School of Nursing, Columbia University, New York, NY

* To whom correspondence should be addressed.

Objective To design and validate a reliable instrument to assess the quality of physician documentation.

Design Adjectives describing clinician attitudes about high-quality clinical documentation were gathered through literature review, assessed by clinical experts, and transformed into a semantic differential scale. Using the scale, physicians and nurse practitioners scored the importance of the adjectives for describing quality in three note types: admission, progress, and discharge notes. Psychometric methods including exploratory factor analysis were applied to provide preliminary evidence for the construct validity and internal consistency reliability.

Results A 22-item, Physician Documentation Quality Instrument (PDQI) was developed. Exploratory factor analysis (n=67 clinician respondents) on three note types resulted in solutions ranging from four (discharge) to six factors (admission and progress), and explained 65.8% (discharge) to 73% (admission and progress) of the variance. Each factor solution was unique. However, four sets of items consistently factored together across all note types: 1) up-to-date and current; 2) brief, concise, succinct; 3) organized and structured; and 4) correct, comprehensible, consistent. Internal consistency reliabilities were: admission note (factor scales=.52-88, overall=.86), progress note (factor scales=.59-.84, overall=.87), and discharge summary (factor scales=.76-.85, overall=.88).

Conclusions The exploratory factor analyses and reliability analyses provide preliminary evidence for the construct validity and internal consistency reliability of the PDQI. Two novel dimensions of the construct for document quality were developed related to form (Well-formed, Compact). Additional work is needed to assess intra- and inter-rater reliability of applying of the proposed instrument and to examine the reproducibility of the factors in other samples.







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