Affiliation:
1. Department of Urology, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL 60611, USA
Abstract
Introduction and objective. We examined patient waiting times, physician utilization, and exam room utilization in order to identify process improvements that may improve patient satisfaction.Methods. Time patient arrived to clinic, time patient was placed in the exam room, time the physician arrived in the exam room, and time physician discharged the patient from the exam room were prospectively recorded for 226 outpatient visits.Results. Overall, 63.2% of patients were on time for their scheduled appointment with 14.8% patient “no-shows.” On-time patients were found to have a longer wait time once in the exam room for the physician than those that were late ( minutes versus minutes, ); however, those patients spent a significantly longer time with the physician ( minutes versus minutes, ). Exam room utilization was lower for late patients (28.9% versus 44.7%, ) with physician utilization lower in clinics with 3 or more late patients when compared to clinics with 2 or fewer (59.7% versus 68.7%, ).Conclusions. Late patients had significantly less time with the physician than on-time patients. Late patients also decreased the overall efficiency of the clinic; therefore, measures to reduce late patients are vital to improve clinic efficiency.
Subject
Urology,Obstetrics and Gynaecology
Cited by
15 articles.
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