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Time Spent on Medical Round Activities, Distance Walked, and Time-Motion in the General Medicine Department at Hamad General Hospital in Qatar

Background The daily morning round is a routine activity performed by medical teams. During the morning round, updates on the patient’s clinical condition, new laboratory results, and other test results are reviewed and discussed between team members, the patient, and at times the family. Completing...

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Autores principales: Al Halabi, Anas, Habas, Elmukhtar, Farfar, Khalifa L, Ghazouani, Hafedh, Alfitori, Gamal, Abdulla, Moza A, Borham, Abdelsalam M, Khan, Fahmi Y
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10200253/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37220459
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.37935
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author Al Halabi, Anas
Habas, Elmukhtar
Farfar, Khalifa L
Ghazouani, Hafedh
Alfitori, Gamal
Abdulla, Moza A
Borham, Abdelsalam M
Khan, Fahmi Y
author_facet Al Halabi, Anas
Habas, Elmukhtar
Farfar, Khalifa L
Ghazouani, Hafedh
Alfitori, Gamal
Abdulla, Moza A
Borham, Abdelsalam M
Khan, Fahmi Y
author_sort Al Halabi, Anas
collection PubMed
description Background The daily morning round is a routine activity performed by medical teams. During the morning round, updates on the patient’s clinical condition, new laboratory results, and other test results are reviewed and discussed between team members, the patient, and at times the family. Completing these tasks takes time. The design of the patient location differs between hospitals, and significant distance between patients can considerably affect round times. This study assesses physicians’ time spent on clinical activities, the distance traveled, and the time they spend walking between patients during daily morning rounds to identify better reorganization methods to reduce wasted time. Methodology The survey was self-administered and had no intervention needing ethical approval. The research team’s leader engaged two observers (a general practitioner from another department and a general internal medicine department case manager) to collect the data. The general practitioner was a medical graduate doctor, while the bed manager was not a medical college graduate. They observed 10 rounds over 10 non-consecutive days from July 1 to July 30, 2022. They recorded daily activities during the daily morning round, including time spent with patients, family conversations, bedside education, medication, social issues, and the time and distance required to move from patient to patient and from one location to location. The informal conversations about age, work history, and other small talk were recorded and converted into quantitative data. In each round, records were given to a statistician for rechecking. Subsequently, the records were imported into a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet for further statistical analysis. For continuous variables, the data were summarized as mean, median, and standard deviation. For categorical variables, the data were summarized as counts or proportions. Results On average, the duration of the daily morning round was 161.7 ± 17.3 minutes. The average number of patients seen by the general internal medicine round team was 14. The median patient encounter time per patient was 14 minutes (11-19 minutes), with an average of 12 minutes. An average of 8.6 employees participated in the 10-day rounds. The physician spent 41.2% of the time in direct contact with the patient during the morning round, 11.4% in maintaining electronic medical records, and 18.20% in bedside teaching. Additionally, 7.1% of the round time was spent because of interruptions by clinical and non-clinical staff other than team members or family members who were not in the room. Furthermore, a team member walked an average of 763 ± 54.5 m (667-872 m) per round, costing 35.7 minutes (22.1%) of the total round time. Conclusions The daily morning round time was significantly longer compared with the reported round times. Relocating patient beds to a common location reduced the rounding time by 22.30%. Disruption, teaching, and medical instruction must also be considered and shortened to reduce the morning round time.
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spelling pubmed-102002532023-05-22 Time Spent on Medical Round Activities, Distance Walked, and Time-Motion in the General Medicine Department at Hamad General Hospital in Qatar Al Halabi, Anas Habas, Elmukhtar Farfar, Khalifa L Ghazouani, Hafedh Alfitori, Gamal Abdulla, Moza A Borham, Abdelsalam M Khan, Fahmi Y Cureus Internal Medicine Background The daily morning round is a routine activity performed by medical teams. During the morning round, updates on the patient’s clinical condition, new laboratory results, and other test results are reviewed and discussed between team members, the patient, and at times the family. Completing these tasks takes time. The design of the patient location differs between hospitals, and significant distance between patients can considerably affect round times. This study assesses physicians’ time spent on clinical activities, the distance traveled, and the time they spend walking between patients during daily morning rounds to identify better reorganization methods to reduce wasted time. Methodology The survey was self-administered and had no intervention needing ethical approval. The research team’s leader engaged two observers (a general practitioner from another department and a general internal medicine department case manager) to collect the data. The general practitioner was a medical graduate doctor, while the bed manager was not a medical college graduate. They observed 10 rounds over 10 non-consecutive days from July 1 to July 30, 2022. They recorded daily activities during the daily morning round, including time spent with patients, family conversations, bedside education, medication, social issues, and the time and distance required to move from patient to patient and from one location to location. The informal conversations about age, work history, and other small talk were recorded and converted into quantitative data. In each round, records were given to a statistician for rechecking. Subsequently, the records were imported into a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet for further statistical analysis. For continuous variables, the data were summarized as mean, median, and standard deviation. For categorical variables, the data were summarized as counts or proportions. Results On average, the duration of the daily morning round was 161.7 ± 17.3 minutes. The average number of patients seen by the general internal medicine round team was 14. The median patient encounter time per patient was 14 minutes (11-19 minutes), with an average of 12 minutes. An average of 8.6 employees participated in the 10-day rounds. The physician spent 41.2% of the time in direct contact with the patient during the morning round, 11.4% in maintaining electronic medical records, and 18.20% in bedside teaching. Additionally, 7.1% of the round time was spent because of interruptions by clinical and non-clinical staff other than team members or family members who were not in the room. Furthermore, a team member walked an average of 763 ± 54.5 m (667-872 m) per round, costing 35.7 minutes (22.1%) of the total round time. Conclusions The daily morning round time was significantly longer compared with the reported round times. Relocating patient beds to a common location reduced the rounding time by 22.30%. Disruption, teaching, and medical instruction must also be considered and shortened to reduce the morning round time. Cureus 2023-04-21 /pmc/articles/PMC10200253/ /pubmed/37220459 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.37935 Text en Copyright © 2023, Al Halabi et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Internal Medicine
Al Halabi, Anas
Habas, Elmukhtar
Farfar, Khalifa L
Ghazouani, Hafedh
Alfitori, Gamal
Abdulla, Moza A
Borham, Abdelsalam M
Khan, Fahmi Y
Time Spent on Medical Round Activities, Distance Walked, and Time-Motion in the General Medicine Department at Hamad General Hospital in Qatar
title Time Spent on Medical Round Activities, Distance Walked, and Time-Motion in the General Medicine Department at Hamad General Hospital in Qatar
title_full Time Spent on Medical Round Activities, Distance Walked, and Time-Motion in the General Medicine Department at Hamad General Hospital in Qatar
title_fullStr Time Spent on Medical Round Activities, Distance Walked, and Time-Motion in the General Medicine Department at Hamad General Hospital in Qatar
title_full_unstemmed Time Spent on Medical Round Activities, Distance Walked, and Time-Motion in the General Medicine Department at Hamad General Hospital in Qatar
title_short Time Spent on Medical Round Activities, Distance Walked, and Time-Motion in the General Medicine Department at Hamad General Hospital in Qatar
title_sort time spent on medical round activities, distance walked, and time-motion in the general medicine department at hamad general hospital in qatar
topic Internal Medicine
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10200253/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37220459
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.37935
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