Attipoe Selasi, Hoffman Jeffrey, Rust Steve, Huang Yungui, Barnard John A, Schweikhart Sharon, Hefner Jennifer L, Walker Daniel M, Linwood Simon
Division of Health Services Management and Policy, College of Public Health, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States.
Division of Clinical Informatics, Nationwide Children's Hospital, Columbus, OH, United States.
JMIR Med Inform. 2022 May 12;10(5):e34787. doi: 10.2196/34787.
Many of the benefits of electronic health records (EHRs) have not been achieved at expected levels because of a variety of unintended negative consequences such as documentation burden. Previous studies have characterized EHR use during and outside work hours, with many reporting that physicians spend considerable time on documentation-related tasks. These studies characterized EHR use during and outside work hours using clock time versus actual physician clinic schedules to define the outside work time.
This study aimed to characterize EHR work outside scheduled clinic hours among primary care pediatricians using a retrospective descriptive task analysis of EHR access log data and actual physician clinic schedules to define work time.
We conducted a retrospective, exploratory, descriptive task analysis of EHR access log data from primary care pediatricians in September 2019 at a large Midwestern pediatric health center to quantify and identify actions completed outside scheduled clinic hours. Mixed-effects statistical modeling was used to investigate the effects of age, sex, clinical full-time equivalent status, and EHR work during scheduled clinic hours on the use of EHRs outside scheduled clinic hours.
Primary care pediatricians (n=56) in this study generated 1,523,872 access log data points (across 1069 physician workdays) and spent an average of 4.4 (SD 2.0) hours and 0.8 (SD 0.8) hours per physician per workday engaged in EHRs during and outside scheduled clinic hours, respectively. Approximately three-quarters of the time working in EHR during or outside scheduled clinic hours was spent reviewing data and reports. Mixed-effects regression revealed no associations of age, sex, or clinical full-time equivalent status with EHR use during or outside scheduled clinic hours.
For every hour primary care pediatricians spent engaged with the EHR during scheduled clinic hours, they spent approximately 10 minutes interacting with the EHR outside scheduled clinic hours. Most of their time (during and outside scheduled clinic hours) was spent reviewing data, records, and other information in EHR.
电子健康记录(EHRs)的许多益处尚未达到预期水平,原因是存在各种意外的负面后果,如文档负担。先前的研究描述了工作时间内和工作时间外的EHR使用情况,许多研究报告称医生在与文档相关的任务上花费了大量时间。这些研究使用时钟时间与实际医生门诊时间表来定义工作时间外的EHR使用情况。
本研究旨在通过对EHR访问日志数据进行回顾性描述性任务分析,并结合实际医生门诊时间表来定义工作时间,以描述基层儿科医生在预定门诊时间之外使用EHR的工作情况。
我们对2019年9月一家大型中西部儿科健康中心的基层儿科医生的EHR访问日志数据进行了回顾性、探索性、描述性任务分析,以量化和识别在预定门诊时间之外完成的操作。使用混合效应统计模型来研究年龄、性别、临床全职等效状态以及预定门诊时间内的EHR工作对预定门诊时间之外EHR使用的影响。
本研究中的基层儿科医生(n = 56)生成了1,523,872个访问日志数据点(跨越1069个医生工作日),每位医生在预定门诊时间内和预定门诊时间外每天平均分别花费4.4(标准差2.0)小时和0.8(标准差0.8)小时使用EHR。在预定门诊时间内或之外使用EHR的时间中,约四分之三用于查看数据和报告。混合效应回归显示,年龄、性别或临床全职等效状态与预定门诊时间内或之外的EHR使用无关联。
基层儿科医生在预定门诊时间内每花费一小时使用EHR,在预定门诊时间外与EHR交互的时间约为10分钟。他们大部分时间(在预定门诊时间内和之外)都用于查看EHR中的数据、记录和其他信息。