The clinical documentation of patients' mental status, behaviour and functioning is a fundamental aspect of inpatient mental health care. It is an important source of information-sharing with the interprofessional team… Click to show full abstract
The clinical documentation of patients' mental status, behaviour and functioning is a fundamental aspect of inpatient mental health care. It is an important source of information-sharing with the interprofessional team and used by other clinicians within the circle of care to guide their decision-making process. Given the body of evidence highlighting concerns about the quality of nursing documentation and the growing literature demonstrating the presence of bias in healthcare, it is critically important that we examine the impact of this bias in nursing practice. The primary objective of this study was to determine whether clinical decisions and judgements change when nurses read documentation that is either biased or neutral. Using a quantitative, observational study that used surveys to collect data, participants were exposed to two patient vignettes and six clinical notes associated with each patient (notes were written with either biased or neutral language) and asked to make clinical decisions and judgements. Results from 199 nurse participants from a tertiary mental health hospital revealed a notable relationship between the type of notes read (biased vs. neutral) and clinical practice, namely, participants reading biased notes were less likely to offer health teaching when administering pro re nata (PRN) medication for sleep. We also found differences in decision-making and judgements based on the type of note read depending on years of experience and type of education. The results indicate that biased language in nursing documentation can influence other clinicians' decisions and judgements about patients, thereby indicating a cascade of bias.
               
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