Dresselhaus T R, Luck J, Wright B C, Spragg R G, Lee M L, Bozzette S A
Medical Service, San Diego Veterans Administration Medical Center, and the Department of Medicine, University of California, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 1998 Aug;13(8):534-40. doi: 10.1046/j.1525-1497.1998.00164.x.
To determine time allocation and the perceived value to education and patient care of the weekday activities of internal medicine housestaff on inpatient rotations and to compare the work activities of interns and residents.
An observational study. We classified activities along five dimensions (association, location, activity, time, and value), developed a computer-assisted self-interview survey, and demonstrated its face and content validity, internal consistency, and interrater reliability. Subjects were assigned survey computers for 5 consecutive weekdays over a 24-week period, into which they entered data when prompted several times a day.
The medical service of a university-affiliated Veterans Administration Medical Center.
Sixty housestaff (36 interns, 24 residents) rotating on the inpatient wards.
We analyzed activities according to content (direct patient care, indirect patient care, education), association, and location. Likert-scale ratings of perceived value to education and patient care were also obtained. Housestaff provided complete responses to 3,812 (95%) of 3,992 prompts by a median of 11 seconds; 93% of responses were logically consistent across the measured dimensions. Housestaff spent more time in indirect patient care (56%) than in direct patient care (14%) or educational activities (45%). Formal educational activities had the highest educational value (66 on 0-100 scale), and direct care had the highest value to patient care (81). Over 30% of time was spent in administrative activities, which had low educational value(40). Compared with residents, interns allocated significantly less time to educational activities (38% vs 57%) and more time to lower-value activities such as documentation (19% vs 12%).
Improved data collection methods demonstrate that housestaff in our program, particularly interns, spend much of their workday in activities that are low in educational and patient care value. Selective elimination or delegation of such activities would preserve higher-value experiences during reductions in overall inpatient training time. Planners can use automated random sampling to guide the rational redesign of housestaff work.
确定内科住院医师在住院轮转期间工作日活动的时间分配以及对教育和患者护理的感知价值,并比较实习医生和住院医生的工作活动。
一项观察性研究。我们沿着五个维度(关联、地点、活动、时间和价值)对活动进行分类,开发了一项计算机辅助自我访谈调查,并验证了其表面效度、内容效度、内部一致性和评分者间信度。在24周的时间里,受试者连续5个工作日被分配使用调查计算机,每天会多次收到提示,他们需在提示时输入数据。
一所大学附属退伍军人管理局医疗中心的内科服务部门。
60名在住院病房轮转的住院医师(36名实习医生,24名住院医生)。
我们根据内容(直接患者护理、间接患者护理、教育)、关联和地点对活动进行了分析。还获得了对教育和患者护理感知价值的李克特量表评分。住院医师对3992次提示中的3812次(95%)给出了完整回复,中位回复时间为11秒;93%的回复在各测量维度上逻辑一致。住院医师在间接患者护理上花费的时间(56%)多于直接患者护理(14%)或教育活动(45%)。正式教育活动具有最高的教育价值(0 - 100分制中为66分),直接护理对患者护理具有最高价值(81分)。超过30%的时间用于行政活动,行政活动的教育价值较低(40分)。与住院医生相比,实习医生分配给教育活动的时间显著更少(38%对57%),而分配给诸如记录等价值较低活动的时间更多(19%对12%)。
改进的数据收集方法表明,我们项目中的住院医师,尤其是实习医生,工作日的大部分时间都花在了教育和患者护理价值较低的活动上。在总体住院培训时间减少的情况下,有选择地消除或委托此类活动将保留更高价值的经历。规划者可以使用自动随机抽样来指导住院医师工作的合理重新设计。