AI Article Synopsis

  • The study assessed how COVID-19 and increased telemedicine affected EHR usage among residents/fellows compared to attending physicians, focusing on volume, efficiency, and workload.
  • Analysis included 11 metrics from a database over three distinct time periods, comparing trainees in primary care versus subspecialties.
  • Results indicated residents/fellows experienced decreased patient volume and EHR time after telehealth implementation, with female physicians closing fewer notes same-day and working longer hours than their male counterparts.

Article Abstract

Objectives: This study aimed to (1) determine the impact of COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) and the corresponding increase in use of telemedicine on volume, efficiency, and burden of electronic health record (EHR) usage by residents and fellows; and (2) to compare these metrics with those of attending physicians.

Methods: We analyzed 11 metrics from Epic's Signal database of outpatient physician user logs for active residents/fellows at our institution across three 1-month time periods: August 2019 (prepandemic/pre-telehealth), May 2020 (mid-pandemic/post-telehealth implementation), and July 2020 (follow-up period) and compared these metrics between trainees and attending physicians. We also assessed how the metrics varied for medical trainees in primary care as compared with subspecialties.

Results: Analysis of 141 residents/fellows and 495 attendings showed that after telehealth implementation, overall patient volume, Time in In Basket per day, Time outside of 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., and Time in notes decreased significantly compared with the pre-telehealth period. Female residents, fellows, and attendings had a lower same day note closure rate before and during the post-telehealth implementation period and spent greater time working outside of 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. compared with male residents, fellows, and attendings ( < 0.01) compared with the pre-telehealth period. Attending physicians had a greater patient volume, spent more time, and were more efficient in the EHR compared with trainees ( < 0.01) in both the post-telehealth and follow-up periods as compared with the pre-telehealth period.

Conclusion: The dramatic change in clinical operations during the pandemic serves as an inflection point to study changes in physician practice patterns in the EHR. We observed that (1) female physicians closed fewer notes the same day and spent more time in the EHR outside of normal working hours compared with male physicians, and (2) attending physicians had higher patient volumes and also higher efficiency in the EHR compared with resident physicians.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10132927PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/a-2031-9437DOI Listing

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