Impact of Scribe Intervention on Documentation in an Outpatient Pediatric Primary Care Practice.

Acad Pediatr

Department of Pediatrics, Penn State Children's Hospital, Penn State College of Medicine (P Jhaveri, B. Fogel, and B Levi), Hershey, Pa; Department of Humanities, Penn State College of Medicine (B Levi), Hershey, Pa.

Published: March 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • The use of electronic health records (EHRs) has led to issues like physician dissatisfaction and burnout, which medical scribes aim to address by easing the documentation burden.
  • A study over 15 months showed that medical scribes significantly reduced the time clinicians spent on charting, lowered the time taken to finalize notes, and improved the overall clinician experience.
  • Results indicated that with scribes, documentation time per patient decreased by over 3 minutes, note finalization time was cut down from nearly a day to less than a third of a day, and clinicians felt they spent 1.2 hours less documenting during clinic sessions.

Article Abstract

Purpose: The use of the electronic health record (EHR) has led to physician dissatisfaction, physician burnout, and delays in documentation and billing. Medical scribes can mitigate these unintended consequences by reducing documentation workload and increasing efficiency.

Objective: To study the effects of medical scribes on time to completion of notes and clinician experience, with a focus on time spent charting during clinic and after-hours. We hypothesized that medical scribes in an outpatient pediatric setting would decrease clinician time spent charting, time to finalize encounter notes, and clinician's perceived documentation time.

Methods: This 15-month single-center observational study was carried out with 3 study periods: pre-scribe, with-scribe, and scribe-withheld. Time spent in EHR was extracted by our EHR vendor. Participants completed surveys regarding time spent documenting. Six clinicians (5 physicians, 1 nurse practitioner) participated in this study to trial the implementation of medical scribes.

Results: EHR time data were collected for 4329 patient visits (2232 pre-scribe, 1888 with-scribe, 209 scribe-withheld periods). Comparing pre-scribe versus with-scribe periods, documentation time per patient decreased by 3-minutes 28-seconds per patient (pre-scribe IQR: 6, with-scribe IQR: 3, P = .028); note timeliness decreased from 0.96 days to 0.26 days (pre-scribe IQR: 0.22, with-scribe IQR: 0.11, P = .028); and clinicians' estimates of time spent in the EHR decreased by 1.2 hours per clinic session (pre-scribe IQR: 0.5, with-scribe IQR: 0.5, P = .031).

Conclusions: Medical scribes in an outpatient pediatric setting result in: 1) decreased time spent charting, 2) reduced time to final sign clinic notes, and 3) decrease in clinician's perceived time spent documenting.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.acap.2021.05.004DOI Listing

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