Nutrition Care Process Quality Evaluation and Standardization Tool: The Next Frontier in Quality Evaluation of Documentation - 18/02/22

Abstract |
Documentation is essential for communicating care between credentialed nutrition and dietetics practitioners and other health care providers. A validated tool that can evaluate quality documentation of the Nutrition Care Process (NCP) encounter, including progress on outcomes is lacking. The aim of the NCP Quality Evaluation and Standardization Tool (QUEST) validation study is to revise an existing NCP audit tool and evaluate it when used within US Veterans Affairs in all clinical care settings. Six registered dietitian nutritionists revised an existing NCP audit tool. The revised tool (NCP-QUEST) was analyzed for clarity, relevance, and reliability. Eighty-five documentation notes (44 initial, 41 reassessment) were received from eight volunteer Veterans Affairs sites. Five of six registered dietitian nutritionists participated in the interrater reliability testing blinded to each other's ratings; and two registered dietitian nutritionists participated in intrarater reliability reviewing the same notes 6 weeks later blinded to the original ratings. Results showed moderate levels of agreement in interrater reliability (Krippendorff’s α = .62 for all items, .66 for total score, and .52 for quality category rating). Intrarater reliability was excellent for all items (α = .86 to .87 for all items; .91 to .94 for total score and.74 to .89 for quality category rating). The NCP-QUEST has high content validity (Content Validity Index = 0.78 for item level, and 0.9 for scale level) after two cycles of content validity review. The tool can facilitate critical thinking, improved linking of NCP chains, and is a necessary foundation for quality data collection and outcomes management. The NCP-QUEST tool can improve accuracy and confidence in charting.
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| STATEMENT OF POTENTIAL CONFLICT OF INTEREST C. Papoutsakis is an employee of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, which has a financial interest in the Nutrition Care Process Terminology described here. |
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| FUNDING/SUPPORT Financial and material support for the development of Nutrition Care Process Terminology has been provided by the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. This study is the result of work supported with resources from Veterans Affairs facilities yet does not represent the views of the Department of Veterans’ Affairs or the US Government. |
Vol 122 - N° 3
P. 650-660 - mars 2022 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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