AI Article Synopsis

  • The medical scribe program aims to improve provider efficiency by allowing clinicians to focus more on patient care rather than EHR documentation, with key objectives of enhancing provider satisfaction and standardizing documentation.
  • The program was implemented in nine clinics across various specialties, and a study showed that the majority of surveyed providers found scribes valuable, reporting significant improvements in documentation time and reduced EHR burden at home.
  • Overall, the use of medical scribes enhanced clinician satisfaction and improved the quality of patient interactions, indicating their effectiveness in improving work life for healthcare providers.

Article Abstract

Background: Medical scribes are frequently incorporated into the patient care model to improve provider efficiency and enable providers to refocus their attention to the patient rather than the electronic health record (EHR). The medical scribe program was based on four pillars (objectives): (1) provider satisfaction, (2) standardized documentation, (3) documentation components for risk adjustment, and (4) revenue enhancement.

Methods: The medical scribe program was deployed in nine non-resident-supported clinics (internal medicine, ophthalmology, orthopedics, hematology/oncology, urology), with the medical scribes (who have no clinical duties) supporting both physicians and advanced practice providers (nurse practitioners and physician assistants). This paper describes a prospective quasi-experimental study conducted at an academic, inner-city, hospital-based clinic system, RESULTS: A pre-post analysis showed positive results; of the 51 providers, 44 responded to the survey pre and 41 responded post. Respondents in the post-scribe group felt that a scribe was valuable (90.2%), that documentation time at the office improved (75.0% poor or marginal pre-scribe, vs. 24% post; p <0.0001), and that time spent on the EHR at home declined (63.6% with excessive or moderately high home EHR time pre vs. 31.7% post; p = 0.003). More providers felt satisfied with their role in clinic with the use of scribes, and more providers felt that with scribes they could listen sufficiently to patients (p <0.05).

Conclusion: Scribe support was well received across the institution in multiple clinical settings. Benefits for providers were seen in documentation time and ability to listen to patients. Scribes appear to be an effective intervention for improving clinician work life.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcjq.2018.01.001DOI Listing

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