2021
DOI: 10.1055/s-0040-1722615
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Physician Workflow in Two Distinctive Emergency Departments: An Observational Study

Abstract: Objectives We characterize physician workflow in two distinctive emergency departments (ED). Physician practices mediated by electronic health records (EHR) are explored within the context of organizational complexity for the delivery of care. Methods Two urban clinical sites, including an academic teaching ED, were selected. Fourteen physicians were recruited. Overall, 62 hours of direct clinical observations were conducted characterizing clinical activities (EHR use, team communication, and patient… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…17 Interaction time with the EHR is not a sufficient measure for workflow assessment as disruptions to clinical workflow associated with EHR are not captured. 68 The average daily total logged time spent on "desktop medicine" was more than 50% of the physician day. 69 Apart from common EHR tasks such as authoring and viewing notes, desktop medicine includes other activities such as communicating with patients through patient portals, communicating with colleagues, searching for the literature, billing, and other clerical activities.…”
Section: Mean Time Spent On Ehr Interaction Wasmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…17 Interaction time with the EHR is not a sufficient measure for workflow assessment as disruptions to clinical workflow associated with EHR are not captured. 68 The average daily total logged time spent on "desktop medicine" was more than 50% of the physician day. 69 Apart from common EHR tasks such as authoring and viewing notes, desktop medicine includes other activities such as communicating with patients through patient portals, communicating with colleagues, searching for the literature, billing, and other clerical activities.…”
Section: Mean Time Spent On Ehr Interaction Wasmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ethnography (observational recording of specific populations, groups, or communities) can provide a rich understanding of the real-time disruption and complexity of digital hospital transformation and its impact on clinical behavior. 14 15 16 17 18 Understanding can then mature from “work as imagined” to “work as done” – what actually happens in real-time. 15 To our knowledge, ethnography is yet to be applied to large-scale digital disruption of health care and can be used to guide clinicians, decision-makers, and health services to optimize future digital hospital transformations.…”
Section: Background and Significancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Posters or pocketbooks with information on common problems (e.g., antibiotic therapy) and automated pop-ups in electronic medical records alerting the doctors of the possibility of sepsis are other examples. In addition, a lean organization of the ED with quiet working stations, linear processes, and good team communication reduces multitasking, improves efficiency, and is less complex [ 52 ].…”
Section: Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%