Partnered Evidence-based Policy Resource Center, VA Boston Healthcare System, Boston, MA, USA; Department of Health Law, Policy, and Management, School of Public Health, Boston University, Boston, MA, USA.
Partnered Evidence-based Policy Resource Center, VA Boston Healthcare System, Boston, MA, USA; Department of Health Law, Policy, and Management, School of Public Health, Boston University, Boston, MA, USA.
Value Health. 2024 Jun;27(6):713-720. doi: 10.1016/j.jval.2024.02.017. Epub 2024 Mar 8.
To improve access, the VA Maintaining Internal Systems and Strengthening Integrated Outside Networks (MISSION) Act of 2018 mandated a 2-year study of medical scribes in Veterans Health Administration specialty clinics and emergency departments. Medical scribes are employed in clinical settings with the goals of increasing provider productivity and satisfaction by minimizing physicians' documentation burden. Our objective is to quantify the economic outcomes of the MISSION Act scribes trial.
A cluster-randomized trial was designed with 12 Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) medical centers randomized into the intervention. We estimated the total cost of the trial, cost per scribe-year, and projected cost of hiring additional physicians to achieve the observed scribe productivity benefits in relative value units and visits per full-time-equivalent over the 2-year intervention period (June 30, 2020 to July 1, 2022).
The estimated cost of the trial was $4.6 million, below the Congressional Budget Office estimate of $5 million. A full-time scribe-year cost approximately $74 600 through contracting and $62 900 through VA hiring. Randomization into the trial led to an approximate 30% increase in productivity in cardiology and 20% in orthopedics. The projected incremental cost of using additional physicians instead of scribes to achieve the same productivity benefits was nearly $1.7 million more, or 75% higher, than the observed cost of scribes in cardiology and orthopedics.
As the largest randomized trial of scribes to date, the MISSION Act scribes trial provides important evidence on the costs and benefits of scribes. Improving productivity enhances access and scribes may give VA a new tool to improve productivity in specialty care at a lower cost than hiring additional providers.
为了改善可及性,2018 年退伍军人事务部维护内部系统和加强综合外部网络(MISSION)法案授权对退伍军人健康管理局(VA)专科诊所和急诊部的医疗抄写员进行为期 2 年的研究。医疗抄写员受雇于临床环境,其目标是通过最大限度地减少医生的文件负担来提高提供者的生产力和满意度。我们的目标是量化 MISSION 法案抄写员试验的经济结果。
采用集群随机试验设计,将 12 个退伍军人事务部(VA)医疗中心随机分为干预组。我们估计了试验的总成本、每个抄写员年的成本以及在 2 年干预期间(2020 年 6 月 30 日至 2022 年 7 月 1 日)以相对价值单位和每全职等效就诊次数计算,招聘额外医生以实现观察到的抄写员生产力效益的成本。
试验的估计成本为 460 万美元,低于国会预算办公室估计的 500 万美元。通过签约,一个全职抄写员年的成本约为 74600 美元,通过 VA 招聘则为 62900 美元。随机分组进入试验导致心脏病学和骨科的生产力分别提高了约 30%和 20%。使用额外的医生而不是抄写员来实现相同的生产力效益的预计增量成本比心脏病学和骨科抄写员的实际成本高出近 170 万美元,即高出 75%。
作为迄今为止最大规模的抄写员随机试验,MISSION 法案抄写员试验提供了有关抄写员成本和效益的重要证据。提高生产力可以改善可及性,抄写员可能为退伍军人事务部提供一种新的工具,以更低的成本提高专科护理的生产力,而无需增加额外的提供者。