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Impact of scribes on emergency medicine doctors’ productivity and patient throughput: multicentre randomised trial

OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the changes in productivity when scribes were used by emergency physicians in emergency departments in Australia and assess the effect of scribes on throughput. DESIGN: Randomised, multicentre clinical trial. SETTING: Five emergency departments in Victoria used Australian tra...

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Autores principales: Walker, Katherine, Ben-Meir, Michael, Dunlop, William, Rosler, Rachel, West, Adam, O’Connor, Gabrielle, Chan, Thomas, Badcock, Diana, Putland, Mark, Hansen, Kim, Crock, Carmel, Liew, Danny, Taylor, David, Staples, Margaret
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6353062/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30700408
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.l121
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author Walker, Katherine
Ben-Meir, Michael
Dunlop, William
Rosler, Rachel
West, Adam
O’Connor, Gabrielle
Chan, Thomas
Badcock, Diana
Putland, Mark
Hansen, Kim
Crock, Carmel
Liew, Danny
Taylor, David
Staples, Margaret
author_facet Walker, Katherine
Ben-Meir, Michael
Dunlop, William
Rosler, Rachel
West, Adam
O’Connor, Gabrielle
Chan, Thomas
Badcock, Diana
Putland, Mark
Hansen, Kim
Crock, Carmel
Liew, Danny
Taylor, David
Staples, Margaret
author_sort Walker, Katherine
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the changes in productivity when scribes were used by emergency physicians in emergency departments in Australia and assess the effect of scribes on throughput. DESIGN: Randomised, multicentre clinical trial. SETTING: Five emergency departments in Victoria used Australian trained scribes during their respective trial periods. Sites were broadly representative of Australian emergency departments: public (urban, tertiary, regional referral, paediatric) and private, not for profit. PARTICIPANTS: 88 physicians who were permanent, salaried employees working more than one shift a week and were either emergency consultants or senior registrars in their final year of training; 12 scribes trained at one site and rotated to each study site. INTERVENTIONS: Physicians worked their routine shifts and were randomly allocated a scribe for the duration of their shift. Each site required a minimum of 100 scribed and non-scribed shifts, from November 2015 to January 2018. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Physicians’ productivity (total patients, primary patients); patient throughput (door-to-doctor time, length of stay); physicians’ productivity in emergency department regions. Self reported harms of scribes were analysed, and a cost-benefit analysis was done. RESULTS: Data were collected from 589 scribed shifts (5098 patients) and 3296 non-scribed shifts (23 838 patients). Scribes increased physicians’ productivity from 1.13 (95% confidence interval 1.11 to 1.17) to 1.31 (1.25 to 1.38) patients per hour per doctor, representing a 15.9% gain. Primary consultations increased from 0.83 (0.81 to 0.85) to 1.04 (0.98 to 1.11) patients per hour per doctor, representing a 25.6% gain. No change was seen in door-to-doctor time. Median length of stay reduced from 192 (interquartile range 108-311) minutes to 173 (96-208) minutes, representing a 19 minute reduction (P<0.001). The greatest gains were achieved by placing scribes with senior doctors at triage, the least by using them in sub-acute/fast track regions. No significant harm involving scribes was reported. The cost-benefit analysis based on productivity and throughput gains showed a favourable financial position with use of scribes. CONCLUSIONS: Scribes improved emergency physicians’ productivity, particularly during primary consultations, and decreased patients’ length of stay. Further work should evaluate the role of the scribe in countries with health systems similar to Australia’s. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ACTRN12615000607572 (pilot site); ACTRN12616000618459.
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spelling pubmed-63530622019-02-21 Impact of scribes on emergency medicine doctors’ productivity and patient throughput: multicentre randomised trial Walker, Katherine Ben-Meir, Michael Dunlop, William Rosler, Rachel West, Adam O’Connor, Gabrielle Chan, Thomas Badcock, Diana Putland, Mark Hansen, Kim Crock, Carmel Liew, Danny Taylor, David Staples, Margaret BMJ Research OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the changes in productivity when scribes were used by emergency physicians in emergency departments in Australia and assess the effect of scribes on throughput. DESIGN: Randomised, multicentre clinical trial. SETTING: Five emergency departments in Victoria used Australian trained scribes during their respective trial periods. Sites were broadly representative of Australian emergency departments: public (urban, tertiary, regional referral, paediatric) and private, not for profit. PARTICIPANTS: 88 physicians who were permanent, salaried employees working more than one shift a week and were either emergency consultants or senior registrars in their final year of training; 12 scribes trained at one site and rotated to each study site. INTERVENTIONS: Physicians worked their routine shifts and were randomly allocated a scribe for the duration of their shift. Each site required a minimum of 100 scribed and non-scribed shifts, from November 2015 to January 2018. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Physicians’ productivity (total patients, primary patients); patient throughput (door-to-doctor time, length of stay); physicians’ productivity in emergency department regions. Self reported harms of scribes were analysed, and a cost-benefit analysis was done. RESULTS: Data were collected from 589 scribed shifts (5098 patients) and 3296 non-scribed shifts (23 838 patients). Scribes increased physicians’ productivity from 1.13 (95% confidence interval 1.11 to 1.17) to 1.31 (1.25 to 1.38) patients per hour per doctor, representing a 15.9% gain. Primary consultations increased from 0.83 (0.81 to 0.85) to 1.04 (0.98 to 1.11) patients per hour per doctor, representing a 25.6% gain. No change was seen in door-to-doctor time. Median length of stay reduced from 192 (interquartile range 108-311) minutes to 173 (96-208) minutes, representing a 19 minute reduction (P<0.001). The greatest gains were achieved by placing scribes with senior doctors at triage, the least by using them in sub-acute/fast track regions. No significant harm involving scribes was reported. The cost-benefit analysis based on productivity and throughput gains showed a favourable financial position with use of scribes. CONCLUSIONS: Scribes improved emergency physicians’ productivity, particularly during primary consultations, and decreased patients’ length of stay. Further work should evaluate the role of the scribe in countries with health systems similar to Australia’s. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ACTRN12615000607572 (pilot site); ACTRN12616000618459. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. 2019-01-30 /pmc/articles/PMC6353062/ /pubmed/30700408 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.l121 Text en Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.
spellingShingle Research
Walker, Katherine
Ben-Meir, Michael
Dunlop, William
Rosler, Rachel
West, Adam
O’Connor, Gabrielle
Chan, Thomas
Badcock, Diana
Putland, Mark
Hansen, Kim
Crock, Carmel
Liew, Danny
Taylor, David
Staples, Margaret
Impact of scribes on emergency medicine doctors’ productivity and patient throughput: multicentre randomised trial
title Impact of scribes on emergency medicine doctors’ productivity and patient throughput: multicentre randomised trial
title_full Impact of scribes on emergency medicine doctors’ productivity and patient throughput: multicentre randomised trial
title_fullStr Impact of scribes on emergency medicine doctors’ productivity and patient throughput: multicentre randomised trial
title_full_unstemmed Impact of scribes on emergency medicine doctors’ productivity and patient throughput: multicentre randomised trial
title_short Impact of scribes on emergency medicine doctors’ productivity and patient throughput: multicentre randomised trial
title_sort impact of scribes on emergency medicine doctors’ productivity and patient throughput: multicentre randomised trial
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6353062/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30700408
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.l121
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