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Assessment of Completeness of Inpatient Medical Records in Shinshicho Primary Hospital, Kembata Tembaro Zone Southern Ethiopia

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dc.creator Alemu, Tesfaye
dc.date 2023-05-28T22:58:49Z
dc.date 2023-05-28T22:58:49Z
dc.date 2019-02
dc.date.accessioned 2024-01-31T07:03:06Z
dc.date.available 2024-01-31T07:03:06Z
dc.identifier http://etd.hu.edu.et//handle/123456789/3368
dc.identifier.uri http://repository.iphce.org/xmlui/handle/123456789/2838
dc.description Background: Medical record completeness is an outstanding problem that affects the quality of health services in many hospitals of Ethiopia. The medical record must contain sufficient data to identify the patient, support the diagnosis or reason for attendance at the health care facility, justify the treatment and accurately document the results of that treatment. On the other hand, Incomplete medical recording, Poor data quality management and reporting system, lack of information technology and its use, shortage of human resource and professional mix, failure to audit medical records and failure to adhere with existing guidelines and standard operational procedures are the major problems in hospital’s medical record management system. However, so far there is a dearth of literatures pertaining to this problem in Ethiopia in general and in Shinshicho primary hospital in particular. Objective: The aim of the current study was to assess the completeness of inpatient medical records in Shinshicho primary Hospital. Methodology: This study was a facility based cross-sectional one. The population was inpatients medical record in Shinshicho primary hospital from July 1/2007- December 30, 2010 E.C and the number of samples was 258 medical records which were chosen by systematic sampling. The data was collected by inpatient medical records structured standard checklist. The collected data was entered in to EPI INFO version 7.0 and then exported to SPSS windows version 20 statistical software for both descriptive and inferential statistics and presented in statistical tables. Result: The overall inpatient medical record completeness was 63.7% and this was significant(P<0.030): Physician note was completed for 74.4%(95% CI: 0.904-0.965), physician order completed for 79.5%(95% CI: 0.772-0.858), nursing care plan completed for 13.2 % (95% CI: 0.104-0.191), medication administration completed for 87.2%(95% CI: 0.853-0.930) and discharge summery sheet was completed for 64.0%(95% CI: 0.605-0.721) at (P < 0.05). According to the findings, nursing care plan sheet was the most incomplete item than others. Conclusion and Recommendation: The finding of this study suggests that availing inpatient medical record standard formats and capacity building training for healthcare providers especially for nurses. Therefore, Shinshicho hospital was recommended to design for availing medical record standard formats and plan capacity building training programs to improve medical record completeness
dc.format application/pdf
dc.language en_US
dc.publisher HUCMHS
dc.subject Medical record, Inpatient department, completeness, Shinshicho hospital, Ethiopia.
dc.title Assessment of Completeness of Inpatient Medical Records in Shinshicho Primary Hospital, Kembata Tembaro Zone Southern Ethiopia
dc.type Thesis


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