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首页> 外文期刊>Clinical medicine & research. >C3-1: Footprints in the Sand: Tracking Physician Work Efforts in Primary Care Using Access Logs in an Electronic Health Record
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C3-1: Footprints in the Sand: Tracking Physician Work Efforts in Primary Care Using Access Logs in an Electronic Health Record

机译:C3-1:沙滩上的足迹:使用电子健康记录中的访问日志跟踪初级保健中医师的工作努力

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Background/AimsUsing EpicCare Electronic Health Record (EHR) data in a large multispecialty ambulatory delivery system, we explore a unique opportunity in which existing EHR data may offer clues on how clinicians use time, a scarce yet critical resource in health services delivery. Traditional means of studying physician time use during clinical encounters (e.g., direct observation) are costly and ignore pre-service and post-service work of physicians' services. The EpicCare EHR offers an alternative, unobtrusive portal to study time use through analysis of access logs. MethodsWe used EHR access log data for one month in 2013 from 49 physicians in two primary care departments who cared for 22,174 patients in a large multispecialty ambulatory delivery system. Over 3 million EHR transactions are examined to explore individual physicians' style of time use on different tasks, as reflected by the access log. In-depth key informant interviews are used to complement the access log data on how physicians use the EHR and the activities that are more or less likely to be captured by the access log. ResultsAbout 43.7% of physicians' total time for the month involved in-person face-to-face visits, 33.8% involved pre and post visit time, 11.4% telephone calls, 5.6% secure messaging to patients, 2.6% prescription refills, and 1.6% on orders for labs, medications or referrals. The earliest EHR access in the office occurred at 12:00 am and the latest logging out time in the office was at 11:59 am the following day. For each patient visit, an average of 16.7 minutes was logged in the exam room and 7.9 minutes logged outside of the exam room. ConclusionsThe access log is a valuable tool for studying physician work efforts. Our findings highlight the significant amount of time clinicians spend outside of office visits. Unless there is a fixed ratio of in-office to total time, visit-centric FFS payment may undercompensate the significant efforts outside of visits. As "desktop medicine" (e.g., via phone, messaging) increases in the age of the Internet, smart phones, and EHRs, reforming provider payment mechanisms to account for work outside of office visits is warranted.
机译:背景/目的在大型的多专业门诊分娩系统中使用EpicCare电子健康记录(EHR)数据,我们探索了一个独特的机会,现有的EHR数据可以为临床医生如何利用时间提供线索,这是卫生服务提供中一种稀缺但至关重要的资源。研究临床相遇期间医生时间使用情况的传统方法(例如直接观察)是昂贵的,并且忽略了医生服务的服务前和服务后工作。 EpicCare EHR提供了一个可选的,简便的门户,可以通过分析访问日志来研究时间使用情况。方法我们使用了2013年一个月的EHR访问日志数据,该数据来自两个基层医疗部门的49位医生,他们在大型多专业门诊分娩系统中护理22,174名患者。查阅了超过300万笔EHR交易,以探索各个医师在不同任务上的时间使用方式,如访问日志所示。深入的关键线人访谈被用来补充访问日志数据,以了解医生如何使用EHR以及访问日志或多或少会捕获到的活动。结果本月约43.7%的医生总时间用于面对面就诊,33.8%的就诊前后时间,11.4%的电话通话,5.6%的安全给患者发送消息,2.6%的处方笔芯和1.6实验室,药物或转诊订单的百分比。最早的EHR进入办公室是在12:00 am,最晚的登出时间是在第二天的11:59。对于每次患者访问,平均在检查室中记录了16.7分钟,而在检查室之外记录了7.9分钟。结论访问日志是研究医师工作成果的宝贵工具。我们的发现强调了临床医生在办公室就诊以外花费的大量时间。除非办公室内的总时间与总时间有固定比例,否则以访问为中心的FFS支付可能无法弥补访问以外的大量工作。随着“桌面医疗”(例如,通过电话,消息传递)在互联网,智能电话和EHR时代的不断发展,有必要改革提供商的付款机制,以应对非办公室就诊的工作。

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