Implementation of a Virtual Asynchronous Scribe Program to Reduce Physician Burnout.

IF 1.7 4区 医学 Q3 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES Journal of Healthcare Management Pub Date : 2022-11-01 DOI:10.1097/JHM-D-21-00329
Jennifer Stephens, Autumn M Kieber-Emmons, Melanie Johnson, Grant M Greenberg
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Goal: Administrative burden is one of many potential root causes of physician burnout. Scribe documentation assistance can reduce this burden. However, traditional in-person scribe services are challenged by consistent staffing because the model requires the physical presence of a scribe and limits the team to a single individual. In addition, in-person scribes cannot provide the flexible support required for virtual care encounters, which can now pivot geographically and temporally. To respond to these challenges, our health network implemented an asynchronous virtual scribe model and evaluated the program's impact on clinician perceptions of burnout across multiple outpatient specialties.

Methods: Using a mixed-methods, pre-/postdesign, this evaluation measured the impact of an asynchronous virtual scribe program on physician burnout. Physicians were given the Professional Fulfillment Index tool (to self-assess their mental state) and free-text comment surveys before virtual scribe initiation and again at 3-, 6-, and 12-month intervals after program implementation. Descriptive statistics of survey results and qualitative review of free-text entries were analyzed for themes of facilitation and barriers to virtual scribe use.

Principal findings: Of 50 physician participants in this study, 42 (84%) completed the preintervention survey and 15 (36%) completed all 4 surveys; 25 participants (50%) discontinued scribe use after 12 months. Burnout levels-as defined by dread, exhaustion, lack of enthusiasm, decrease in empathy, and decrease in colleague connection-all trended toward improvement during this study. Importantly, quality, time savings, burnout, and productivity moved in positive directions as well.

Practical application: The cost burden to physicians and the COVID-19 pandemic inhibited the continued use of asynchronous virtual medical scribes. Nevertheless, those who continued in the program have reported positive outcomes, which indicates that the service can be a viable and effective tool to reduce physician burnout.

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虚拟异步抄写程序的实现以减少医生的职业倦怠。
目的:行政负担是医生职业倦怠的潜在根源之一。Scribe文档帮助可以减轻这种负担。然而,传统的现场抄写员服务受到一致人员配置的挑战,因为该模型需要抄写员的实际存在,并将团队限制为单个人。此外,现场抄写员无法为虚拟护理提供所需的灵活支持,虚拟护理现在可以在地理上和时间上进行调整。为了应对这些挑战,我们的卫生网络实施了一个异步虚拟抄写员模型,并评估了该项目对临床医生对多个门诊专科的倦怠感的影响。方法:采用混合方法,前后设计,该评估测量了异步虚拟抄写程序对医生职业倦怠的影响。在虚拟抄写开始之前,以及在项目实施后的3个月、6个月和12个月的间隔时间内,给医生提供了专业实现指数工具(自我评估他们的精神状态)和自由文本评论调查。对调查结果的描述性统计和对自由文本条目的定性审查进行了分析,以促进和阻碍虚拟抄写员的使用。主要发现:在50名参与研究的医生中,42名(84%)完成了干预前调查,15名(36%)完成了所有4项调查;25名参与者(50%)在12个月后停止使用scriscribe。在这项研究中,倦怠水平——由恐惧、疲惫、缺乏热情、同理心减少和同事联系减少来定义——都有改善的趋势。重要的是,质量、时间节省、倦怠和生产力也朝着积极的方向发展。实际应用:医生的成本负担和COVID-19大流行抑制了异步虚拟医疗抄写员的继续使用。然而,那些继续参加项目的人报告了积极的结果,这表明该服务可以成为减少医生倦怠的可行和有效的工具。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Healthcare Management
Journal of Healthcare Management HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES-
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
5.60%
发文量
68
期刊介绍: The Journal of Healthcare Management is the official journal of the American College of Healthcare Executives. Six times per year, JHM offers timely healthcare management articles that inform and guide executives, managers, educators, and researchers. JHM also contains regular columns written by experts and practitioners in the field that discuss management-related topics and industry trends. Each issue presents an interview with a leading executive.
期刊最新文献
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