How can we better prepare new doctors for the tasks and challenges of ward rounds?: An observational study of junior doctors' experiences.

Med Teach

Health Psychology, Institute of Applied Health Sciences, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.

Published: November 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Ward rounds are important for taking care of patients but are tricky for new doctors to manage.
  • A study watched new doctors during two rounds and tracked what they did and how stressed they felt by checking their heart rates.
  • The results showed that new doctors spent most of their time on paperwork and talking about patients, not actually seeing them, and they were most stressed when doing administrative tasks or trying to do many things at once.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Ward rounds play a crucial role in the delivery of patient care in inpatient settings, but involve a complex mix of tasks, skills and challenges for junior doctors to negotiate. This study informs the development of high-quality training by identifying the activities that junior doctors perform, and those associated with stress during real-life ward rounds.

Materials And Methods: All activities performed by FY1 doctors ( = 60) over 2 ward rounds were coded in real-time by a trained observer using the work observation method by activity timing (WOMBAT). Doctors' heart rate was continuously recorded and non-metabolic peaks in heart rate used as a physiological indicator of stress.

Results: During ward rounds, FY1 doctors commonly engaged in indirect patient care, professional communication, documentation and observation. Very little time was spent on direct patient care (6%) or explicit supervision/education (0.01%). Heart rate data indicated that stress was highest during administrative tasks while interacting directly with patients while stepping out of rounds to complete personal tasks, when answering bleeps and while multi-tasking.

Conclusions: Training that specifically covers the activities involved, skills required, and challenges inherent in real-life ward rounds may better prepare FY doctors for this complex area of practice.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0142159X.2021.1940912DOI Listing

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