Division of Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California, United States.
Division of Hematology and General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California, United States.
Appl Clin Inform. 2021 May;12(3):637-646. doi: 10.1055/s-0041-1731678. Epub 2021 Jul 14.
Accumulating evidence indicates an association between physician electronic health record (EHR) use after work hours and occupational distress including burnout. These studies are based on either physician perception of time spent in EHR through surveys which may be prone to bias or by utilizing vendor-defined EHR use measures which often rely on proprietary algorithms that may not take into account variation in physician's schedules which may underestimate time spent on the EHR outside of scheduled clinic time. The Stanford team developed and refined a nonproprietary EHR use algorithm to track the number of hours a physician spends logged into the EHR and calculates the Clinician Logged-in Outside Clinic (CLOC) time, the number of hours spent by a physician on the EHR outside of allocated time for patient care.
The objective of our study was to measure the association between CLOC metrics and validated measures of physician burnout and professional fulfillment.
Physicians from adult outpatient Internal Medicine, Neurology, Dermatology, Hematology, Oncology, Rheumatology, and Endocrinology departments who logged more than 8 hours of scheduled clinic time per week and answered the annual wellness survey administered in Spring 2019 were included in the analysis.
We observed a statistically significant positive correlation between CLOC ratio (defined as the ratio of CLOC time to allocated time for patient care) and work exhaustion (Pearson's = 0.14; = 0.04), but not interpersonal disengagement, burnout, or professional fulfillment.
The CLOC metrics are potential objective EHR activity-based markers associated with physician work exhaustion. Our results suggest that the impact of time spent on EHR, while associated with exhaustion, does not appear to be a dominant factor driving the high rates of occupational burnout in physicians.
越来越多的证据表明,医生在工作时间之外使用电子健康记录(EHR)与职业压力有关,包括倦怠。这些研究基于医生通过调查感知的 EHR 时间投入,这可能存在偏差,或者利用供应商定义的 EHR 使用措施,这些措施通常依赖于专有算法,可能没有考虑到医生的时间表差异,这可能会低估 EHR 之外的非计划诊所时间的使用时间。斯坦福大学的团队开发并完善了一种非专有的 EHR 使用算法,以跟踪医生登录 EHR 的时间,并计算医生在分配给患者护理时间之外使用 EHR 的时间,即 Clinician Logged-in Outside Clinic(CLOC)时间。
我们的研究目的是衡量 CLOC 指标与医生倦怠和职业满意度的验证指标之间的关联。
每周登录 EHR 的计划诊所时间超过 8 小时并回答 2019 年春季进行的年度健康调查的成年门诊内科、神经科、皮肤科、血液科、肿瘤科、风湿科和内分泌科医生被纳入分析。
我们观察到 CLOC 比值(定义为 CLOC 时间与分配给患者护理的时间之比)与工作疲惫之间存在统计学上显著的正相关(Pearson's = 0.14; = 0.04),但与人际脱节、倦怠或职业满意度无关。
CLOC 指标是潜在的与医生工作疲惫相关的客观基于 EHR 活动的指标。我们的结果表明,虽然 EHR 时间的投入与疲惫有关,但似乎不是导致医生职业倦怠率高的主要因素。