This study will test if giving parents access to their child's medical notes on a bedside tablet: * helps them get more involved in their care * helps identify safety concerns 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: * note access * parent-reported safety concerns * overall experiences
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.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
630
Inpatient notes shared in real-time on a hospital-owned bedside tablet linked to their child's records.
Children's Hospital of Los Angeles
Los Angeles, California, United States
RECRUITINGSeattle Children's Hospital
Seattle, Washington, United States
NOT_YET_RECRUITINGAmerican Family Children's Hospital
Madison, Wisconsin, United States
RECRUITINGNumber of notes accessed
Researchers will abstract note access during hospitalization from the EHR and compare the frequency and proportion of available notes accessed between arms.
Time frame: Duration of study participation, 2 to 7 days
Safety concern reporting
Safety concern reporting will be measured using the OpenNotes safety concern reporting tool, a 9-item questionnaire adapted for parent-reported safety concerns during hospitalization. The tool will be translated into Spanish and piloted for this study. Parent-reported safety concerns will be reviewed by the PI and site PIs and categorized as definite safety issues, possible safety issues, or other. Definite and possible issues will be further categorized by type (e.g., medication, physical exam) and assessed via chart reviews for associated changes to the medical record or patient care (yes/no/uncertain). Researchers will compare results across arms.
Time frame: Duration of study participation, 2 to 7 days
Hospital experience
Experience will be measured using the Child Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAHPS) survey, which evaluates parent perceptions of their hospital experience upon discharge. The survey includes closed-ended and Likert-style items rated on a 5-point scale, with "strongly agree" as the highest score. Key measures include overall hospital rating, willingness to recommend, and "helping you report concerns." It is available in English and Spanish. It will be administered prior to hospital discharge and compared across arms.
Time frame: Duration of study participation, 2 to 7 days
Change in parent activation
Activation will be measured using the Parent-Patient Activation Measure (P-PAM), a 13-item Likert-style tool adapted from the Patient Activation Measure (PAM), assessing skills and confidence for managing a child's healthcare. Scores range from 0-100, with higher scores indicating greater activation. The P-PAM has demonstrated validity and reliability in both English and Spanish. It will be administered at baseline and prior to hospital discharge and compared across arms.
Time frame: Baseline to discharge, 2 to 7 days
Change in Anxiety
Anxiety will be measured using the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) Form Y, a 40-item Likert-style questionnaire assessing anxiety on a 4-point scale. Total scores range from 20-80, with higher scores indicating greater anxiety. The STAI is validated for sensitivity to health interventions over time and is available in English and Spanish. It will be administered at baseline and prior to hospital discharge and compared across arms.
Time frame: Baseline to discharge, 2 to 7 days
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