REVIEW OF THE COMPLETENESS OF GENERAL CONSENT OF EMERGENCY PATIENTS EMERGENCY AT PROF. DR. IGNG NGOERAH HOSPITAL
Main Article Content
Abstract
General consent is a form that must be filled in to support accreditation. However, the provision of general consent information has not been carried out optimally. Similar problems were also found when conducting a preliminary study at Prof. Dr. I G.N.G Ngoerah Hospital. The data showed that the incomplete rate of filling out general consent reached 61.15% which was caused by several factors. Therefore, it is necessary to conduct further studies regarding the completeness of general consent for emergency patients at Prof. Dr. I.G.N.G. Ngoerah Hospital. This study aims to determine the completeness of identification, authentication, recording and reporting on general consent for emergency patients at Prof. Dr. I.G.N.G Ngoerah Hospital. This research is a quantitative study with a descriptive approach. The samples in this study were 314 emergency care medical record documents. The results of this study were found 308 complete general consent forms in terms of completeness of identification, 283 forms were completed with the signature of the officer, 282 forms were found complete by including the name of the person in charge of the patient, 265 forms were complete with information on the relationship between the person in charge and the patient, 264 forms were complete with telephone numbers / email. A total of 271 forms were complete with home address. A total of 276 forms have included the date and time, 213 forms have included contact information. Suggestions that can be given are that the hospital can strengthen policies and procedures through the provision of SOPs, organizing training, and conducting regular monitoring and evaluation
Article Details

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.