UHNM staff with laptops
Therapy staff from University Hospitals of North Midlands are using electronic notes to improve patient care.
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UHNM therapy staff introduce electronic notes to improve patient care 

1 min read

Therapy staff from University Hospitals of North Midlands are coordinating care for patients quicker and more efficiently thanks to new electronic note taking. 

Therapies at County Hospital, together with other allied health professionals, were involved in the initiation of the digitalisation project and roll out to wards that are working towards multi-disciplinary team electronic noting. 

The project, which was introduced in November, has enabled quick access to accurate and up-to-date therapy records and has improved communication between clinicians, making discharging patients quicker and more efficient. 

Notes are taken on tablets or laptops by physiotherapists and occupational therapists and the information is uploaded to the digital platform iPortal, which can be accessed by other clinicians caring for a patient. 

Clare Johnson, Head of Therapies at County Hospital, said: “The digitalisation of notes means that any previously handwritten notes can now be entered directly onto iPortal. 

“Initially the unavailability of hardware was preventing users being able to do this in a timely manner, but due to UTF funding we were able to get support with some extra hardware such as tablets and laptops.  

“Stuart Fallaize Cunningham from the Business Change team provided invaluable support and we are thrilled to now have over 50 staff members across eight wards at County Hospital fully digital.” 

The Acute Medical Unit, A&E and outpatient areas neurology and amputees at County Hospital are now using digital notes leaving two outpatient areas left to make the switch over. 

Sarah Hind, UHNM discharge facilitator, said: “Having the therapy notes electronic makes them much more accessible. I feel electronic therapy notes have improved communication and teamwork and they are also assisting in facilitating more timely discharges.” 

The electronic noting system has also benefited colleagues at Midlands Partnership University NHS Foundation Trust

It is now hoped the project will progress across to the Trust’s Royal Stoke site. 

Hayley Johnson

Senior journalist with over 15 years’ experience writing for customers and audiences all over the world. Previous work has included everything from breaking news for national newspapers to complex business stories, in-depth human-interest features and celebrity interviews - and most things in between.

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