would like to thank Armendariz et al for their contribution to understanding the root characteristics of rounding interruptions inherent to medical learners in the inpatient teaching environment. 1 As noted in the study conclusion, proactive communication with nursing staff holds merit for most team-based improvement strategies. However, based on anecdotal experience, simple discussions with nursing staff resulted in trivial long-term change. An effective, actionable plan is needed for residency programs to address inappropriately timed pages and improve paging etiquette during inpatient rounding.Inpatient medicine has trended toward algorithmicbased patient care under the banners of improved patient outcomes and hospital efficiency. Examples within this trend include antibiotic prescribing practices, pathology-directed power plans, and sepsis triage goals. 2 Standardization for interprofessional communication, however, remains largely unchanged and differs across the spectrum of the US health care system. This leads to increased stress, burnout rates, and frustrations during rounding periods among medical trainees. 3 An algorithm-based text page system for nursing staff would improve communication and rounding efficiency by utilizing a decision tree model. This tree would include the initial decision of page appropriateness during rounding times. If it meets criteria for paging, the algorithm will require important triaging information for the text page, including urgency level