Institute and Clinic for Occupational, Social and Environmental Medicine, University Hospital, LMU Munich, Ziemssenstrasse 1, 80336, Munich, Germany.
Department of Emergency Medicine and Department of General, Visceral and Trauma Surgery, Academic Hospital Porz am Rhein, Urbacher Weg 19, 51149, Cologne, Germany.
Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med. 2021 Jan 7;29(1):14. doi: 10.1186/s13049-020-00824-8.
Multitasking is a key skill for emergency department (ED) providers. Yet, potentially beneficial or debilitating effects for provider functioning and cognition are underexplored. We therefore aimed to investigate the role of multitasking for ED physicians' work stress and situation awareness (SA).
Two consecutive, multi-source studies utilizing standardized expert observations in combination with physicians' self-reports on stress and SA were set out in an academic ED. To control for ED workload, measures of patient acuity, patient counts, and ED staff on duty were included. Regression analyses estimated associations between observed proportion of time spent in multitasking with matched ED physicians' reports on stress (study 1) and SA (study 2).
ED physicians engaged between 18.7% (study 1) and 13.0% (study 2) of their worktime in multitasking. Self-reported as well as expert-observed multitasking were significantly associated. This confirms the internal validity of our observational approach. After controlling for ED workload, we found that physicians who engaged more frequently in multitasking perceived higher work stress (Beta = .02, 95%CI .001-.03; p = .01). In study 2, ED physicians with more frequent multitasking behaviors reported higher SA (B = .08, 95%CI .02-.14; p = .009).
Multitasking is often unavoidable in ED care. Our findings suggest that ED physicians' multitasking increases stress experiences, yet, may facilitate professional's experiences of situation awareness. Our results warrant further investigation into potentially ambivalent effects of ED providers' multitasking in effectively sharing time between competing demands while maintaining performance and safety.
多任务处理是急诊科(ED)医护人员的一项关键技能。然而,其对医护人员工作压力和情境意识(SA)的潜在有益或有害影响尚未得到充分探索。因此,我们旨在研究多任务处理对 ED 医师工作压力和情境意识的作用。
在一家学术性 ED 中,我们进行了两项连续的、多源研究,利用标准化的专家观察,结合医师对压力和 SA 的自我报告。为了控制 ED 工作量,我们纳入了患者病情严重程度、患者数量和值班 ED 工作人员的测量值。回归分析估计了观察到的多任务处理时间比例与匹配的 ED 医师报告的压力(研究 1)和 SA(研究 2)之间的关联。
ED 医师在工作中分别有 18.7%(研究 1)和 13.0%(研究 2)的时间从事多任务处理。自我报告和专家观察到的多任务处理均显著相关。这证实了我们观察方法的内部有效性。在控制 ED 工作量后,我们发现,更多地从事多任务处理的医师感知到更高的工作压力(Beta = .02,95%CI.001-.03;p = .01)。在研究 2 中,更多地从事多任务处理行为的 ED 医师报告了更高的 SA(B = .08,95%CI.02-.14;p = .009)。
多任务处理在 ED 护理中经常是不可避免的。我们的研究结果表明,ED 医师的多任务处理增加了压力体验,但可能有助于提高专业人员对情境意识的体验。我们的研究结果表明,需要进一步研究 ED 医护人员在有效分配时间方面的多任务处理的潜在矛盾影响,同时兼顾应对竞争需求、保持绩效和安全。