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This study will test if giving parents access to their child's medical notes on a bedside tablet:
Parents of hospitalized children will be randomly assigned to either use the Bedside Notes tool or follow usual care.
To see if this approach improves care and safety, researchers will measure:
Full description
Hospitalized children face alarming rates of harm due to medical errors, yet parents often lack access to the clinical information necessary to partner effectively in their child's care. Although clinicians are required to share inpatient clinical notes detailing diagnoses and treatment plans, <10% of parents access these notes during hospitalization. To address this critical gap, we developed the Bedside Notes intervention, a multicomponent strategy to improve parent access to clinical notes during their child's hospitalization and engage them in safety efforts. The intervention includes: (1) real-time access to inpatient notes through their child's patient portal on a bedside tablet and (2) a notes orientation video. In a single-center study, this intervention was associated with a >10-fold increase in parent note access and enabled 20% of parents to identify potential safety concerns, with 60% of these concerns confirmed as safety issues.
This multisite randomized controlled trial (RCT) will evaluate the effectiveness of the Bedside Notes intervention in improving parent access to inpatient notes and enhancing safety reporting. Specific aims are to: (1) assess the impact of the intervention on parent note access, (2) evaluate its effect on parent-reported safety concerns and experiences, and (3) identify barriers and facilitators to implementation. Guided by the Systems Engineering Initiative for Patient Safety 2.0 framework, this hybrid type 1 RCT will enroll English- and Spanish-speaking parents of 600 children admitted to pediatric services at three hospitals. Parents will be randomized to either: (1) usual care (access to outpatient portals on personal devices) or (2) the Bedside Notes intervention (proxy access to patient portal on bedside tablets with accompanying orientation video). A subset of parents and healthcare staff will also be interviewed about their experience with the intervention. Data will be collected through surveys, interviews, and electronic health record audits.
This study is the first multisite RCT to evaluate the impact of inpatient note access on parent-reported outcomes. By leveraging bilingual recruitment, two EHR platforms, and input from a national advisory group, the study addresses barriers to equitable access and sustainability. Findings will advance understanding of how health information technology can engage parents as partners in improving inpatient safety for children and inform broader efforts to integrate families into safety initiatives.
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630 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Michelle Kelly, MD, PhD; Kristina Singh-Verdeflor
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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