- Hose, Bat-Zion;
- Hoonakker, Peter;
- Wooldridge, Abigail;
- Brazelton Iii, Thomas;
- Dean, Shannon;
- Eithun, Ben;
- Fackler, James;
- Gurses, Ayse;
- Kelly, Michelle;
- Kohler, Jonathan;
- McGeorge, Nicolette;
- Ross, Joshua;
- Rusy, Deborah;
- Carayon, Pascale
OBJECTIVE: To describe physician perceptions of the potential goals, characteristics, and content of the electronic problem list (PL) in pediatric trauma. METHODS: We conducted 12 semistructured interviews with physicians involved in the pediatric trauma care process, including residents, fellows, and attendings from four services: emergency medicine, surgery, anesthesia, and pediatric critical care. Using qualitative content analysis, we identified PL goals, characteristics, and patient-related information from these interviews and the hospitals PL etiquette document of guideline. RESULTS: We identified five goals of the PL (to document the patients problems, to make sense of the patients problems, to make decisions about the care plan, to know who is involved in the patients care, and to communicate with others), seven characteristics of the PL (completeness, efficiency, accessibility, multiple users, organized, created before arrival, and representing uncertainty), and 22 patient-related information elements (e.g., injuries, vitals). Physicians suggested criteria for a PL varied across services with respect to goals, characteristics, and patient-related information. CONCLUSION: Physicians involved in pediatric trauma care described the electronic PL as ideally more than a list of a patients medical diagnoses and injuries. The information elements mentioned are typically found in other parts of the patients electronic record besides the PL, such as past medical history and labs. Future work is needed to evaluate the optimal design of the PL so that users with emergent cases, such as pediatric trauma, have access to key information related to the patients immediate problems.