Arndt Brian, Tuan Wen-Jan, White Jennifer, Schumacher Jessica
From the Department of Family Medicine (BA, W-JT, JW) and the Department of Population Health Sciences (JS), University of Wisconsin, Madison.
J Am Board Fam Med. 2014 Jul-Aug;27(4):530-7. doi: 10.3122/jabfm.2014.04.130236.
An understanding of primary care provider (PCP) workload is an important consideration in establishing optimal PCP panel size. However, no widely acceptable measure of PCP workload exists that incorporates the effort involved with both non-face-to-face patient care activities and face-to-face encounters. Accounting for this gap is critical given the increase in non-face-to-face PCP activities that has accompanied electronic health records (EHRs) (eg, electronic messaging). Our goal was to provide a comprehensive assessment of perceived PCP workload, accounting for aspects of both face-to-face and non-face-to-face encounters.
Internal medicine, family medicine, and pediatric PCPs completed a self-administered survey about the perceived workload involved with face-to-face and non-face-to-face panel management activities as well as the perceived challenge associated with caring for patients with particular biomedical, demographic, and psychosocial characteristics (n = 185). Survey results were combined with EHR data at the individual patient and PCP service levels to assess PCP panel workload, accounting for face-to-face and non-face-to-face utilization.
Of the multiple face-to-face and non-face-to-face activities associated with routine primary care, PCPs considered hospital admissions, obstetric care, hospital discharges, and new patient preventive health visits to be greater workload than non-face-to-face activities such as telephone calls, electronic communication, generating letters, and medication refills. Total workload within PCP panels at the individual patient level varied by overall health status, and the total workload of non-face-to-face panel management activities associated with routine primary care was greater than the total workload associated with face-to-face encounters regardless of health status.
We used PCP survey results coupled with EHR data to assess PCP workload associated with both face-to-face as well as non-face-to-face panel management activities in primary care. The non-face-to-face workload was an important contributor to overall PCP workload for all patients regardless of overall health status. This is an important consideration for PCP workload assessment given the changing nature of primary care that requires more non-face-to-face effort, resulting in an overall increase in PCP workload.
了解初级保健提供者(PCP)的工作量是确定最佳PCP患者管理规模时的一项重要考量因素。然而,目前尚无一种被广泛接受的PCP工作量衡量方法,能将非面对面患者护理活动和面对面诊疗所涉及的工作都纳入考量。鉴于随着电子健康记录(EHR)(如电子信息传递)的出现,非面对面PCP活动有所增加,弥补这一差距至关重要。我们的目标是对PCP感知工作量进行全面评估,同时考虑面对面和非面对面诊疗的各个方面。
内科、家庭医学和儿科的PCP完成了一项自我管理的调查,内容涉及面对面和非面对面患者管理活动的感知工作量,以及照顾具有特定生物医学、人口统计学和社会心理特征患者所感知到的挑战(n = 185)。调查结果与个体患者和PCP服务层面的EHR数据相结合,以评估PCP患者管理工作量,同时考虑面对面和非面对面诊疗的使用情况。
在与常规初级保健相关联的多项面对面和非面对面活动中,PCP认为住院、产科护理、出院以及新患者预防性健康检查的工作量大于非面对面活动,如电话沟通(通话)、电子通信、撰写信件和药物续方。个体患者层面的PCP患者管理总工作量因总体健康状况而异,且与常规初级保健相关的非面对面患者管理活动的总工作量大于与面对面诊疗相关的总工作量,无论健康状况如何。
我们利用PCP调查结果及EHR数据,评估了初级保健中与面对面和非面对面患者管理活动相关的PCP工作量。无论患者总体健康状况如何,非面对面工作量都是所有患者PCP总体工作量的重要组成部分。鉴于初级保健性质的变化需要更多非面对面工作投入,从而导致PCP工作量总体增加,这对于PCP工作量评估而言是一个重要考量因素。