COVID exacerbated the gender disparity in physician electronic health record inbox burden.

J Am Med Inform Assoc

Division of Clinical Informatics and Digital Transformation (DoC-IT), University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California, USA.

Published: September 2023

The COVID-19 pandemic was associated with significant changes to the delivery of ambulatory care, including a dramatic increase in patient messages to physicians. While asynchronous messaging is a valuable communication modality for patients, a greater volume of patient messages is associated with burnout and decreased well-being for physicians. Given that women physicians experienced greater electronic health record (EHR) burden and received more patient messages pre-pandemic, there is concern that COVID may have exacerbated this disparity. Using EHR audit log data of ambulatory physicians at an academic medical center, we used a difference-in-differences framework to evaluate the impact of the pandemic on patient message volume and compare differences between men and women physicians. We found patient message volume increased post-COVID for all physicians, and women physicians saw an additional increase compared to men. Our results contribute to the growing evidence of different communication expectations for women physicians that contribute to the gender disparity in EHR burden.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10531114PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jamia/ocad141DOI Listing

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