Objectives
This study aims to assess electronic health record (EHR) use in physiotherapy, identify factors influencing its adoption and evaluate physiotherapists’ perceptions of its relevance.
Methods
A cross-sectional study was conducted with 138 licensed physiotherapists recruited through digital platforms. EHR utilisation was evaluated using the RSEFisio scale, a validated instrument designed to capture multiple dimensions of EHR use in physiotherapy. Descriptive and inferential statistical analyses were applied to examine usage patterns and contextual factors. The study followed the Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology guidelines.
Results
The EHR utilisation rate was 78.3%. Higher utilisation was significantly associated with adequate time allocated for documentation (p=0.001), systematic recording for all patients (p=0.013) and multi-professional access to records (p=0.043). The frequency of documentation was closely linked to the perceived clinical relevance of recorded items.
Discussion
Despite the high level of EHR utilisation, physiotherapy documentation remains incomplete and driven by perceived clinical relevance. Utilisation improves with adequate time, standardised recording and interprofessional access. Inconsistent data quality undermines continuity of care and limits secondary uses, including artificial intelligence integration. Strengthening documentation is essential to improve clinical workflows and support data-driven decision-making in physiotherapy.
Conclusion
Physiotherapists recognise the value of comprehensive documentation, but report limited time and incomplete records. The disconnect between awareness and practice highlights the need for practical, system-level strategies to support more consistent and effective EHR use in physiotherapy.