Young carers have been defined broadly as young people aged up to 25 years who care, or help to provide care to a family affected by disability, mental illness, chronic health conditions, terminal illness, alcohol or other drug issues or who is frail aged (Moore, 2005;Moore & McArthur, 2007
The aim of this systematic literature review was to identify peer‐reviewed publications on the use and/or evaluation of child protection or domestic violence alerts in electronic medical records. A systematic literature search yielded 751 results, with four articles retained for review. Two articles related to the Child Protection – Information Sharing electronic medical record alert system in England and two articles described a clinical decision‐support alert operating in the background of an electronic medical record system in the emergency department of the Pittsburgh Children's Hospital, Pennsylvania, USA. No articles were identified that described domestic violence electronic medical record alert systems. Child protection electronic medical record alert systems are operating in healthcare facilities in several countries. However, despite their promise in terms of improving healthcare and service coordination for children and their families, research testing the efficacy of these systems is limited.
‘Identif[ies] peer‐reviewed publications on the use and/or evaluation of child protection or domestic violence alerts in electronic medical records’
Key Practitioner Messages
Child protection alerts in electronic medical records are used in a number of countries.
No published examples of the use of domestic violence alerts in electronic medical records could be found.
Alerts on linked electronic medical records can convey standardised, current, clinically significant information to a multitude of clinicians across several health services at once.
Two evaluation studies of a child protection electronic medical record alert system were found; therefore, more evaluation studies are required.
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