Global Pediatric Health (Feb 2017)

Discrepancies in Communication Versus Documentation of Weight-Management Benchmarks

  • Christy B. Turer MD, MHS,
  • Sarah E. Barlow MD, MPH,
  • Sergio Montaño MD, MA,
  • Glenn Flores MD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/2333794X16685190
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4

Abstract

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To examine gaps in communication versus documentation of weight-management clinical practices, communication was recorded during primary care visits with 6- to 12-year-old overweight/obese Latino children. Communication/documentation content was coded by 3 reviewers using communication transcripts and health-record documentation. Discrepancies in communication/documentation content codes were resolved through consensus. Bivariate/multivariable analyses examined factors associated with discrepancies in benchmark communication/documentation. Benchmarks were neither communicated nor documented in up to 42% of visits, and communicated but not documented or documented but not communicated in up to 20% of visits. Lowest benchmark performance rates were for laboratory studies (35%) and nutrition/weight-management referrals (42%). In multivariable analysis, overweight (vs obesity) was associated with 1.6 more discrepancies in communication versus documentation ( P = .03). Many weight-management benchmarks are not met, not documented, or performed without being communicated. Enhanced communication with families and documentation in health records may promote lifestyle changes in overweight children and higher quality care for overweight children in primary care.