Accounting for taste: preferences mediate the relationship between documentation time and ambulatory physician burnout

Author:

Apathy Nate C12ORCID,Hartman-Hall Heather34,Tran Alberta56,Kim Dae Hyun7,Ratwani Raj M89,Marchalik Daniel310

Affiliation:

1. Health Policy & Management, University of Maryland School of Public Health , College Park, MD 20742, United States

2. Regenstrief Institute , Indianapolis, IN 46202, United States

3. MedStar Health Center for Wellbeing, MedStar Health , Columbia, MD 21044, United States

4. Clinical Medicine, Georgetown University School of Medicine , Washington, DC 20007, United States

5. Institute for Quality and Safety, MedStar Health Research Institute , Columbia, MD 21044, United States

6. Cecil B. Sheps Center for Health Services Research, University of North Carolina—Chapel Hill , Chapel Hill, NC 27599, United States

7. Health Management and Policy, Georgetown University School of Health , Washington, DC 20007, United States

8. National Center for Human Factors in Healthcare, MedStar Health Research Institute , Columbia, MD 21044, United States

9. Emergency Medicine, Georgetown University School of Medicine , Washington, DC 20007, United States

10. Urology, Georgetown University School of Medicine , Washington, DC 20007, United States

Abstract

Abstract Objectives Physician burnout in the US has reached crisis levels, with one source identified as extensive after-hours documentation work in the electronic health record (EHR). Evidence has illustrated that physician preferences for after-hours work vary, such that after-hours work may not be universally burdensome. Our objectives were to analyze variation in preferences for after-hours documentation and assess if preferences mediate the relationship between after-hours documentation time and burnout. Materials and Methods We combined EHR active use data capturing physicians’ hourly documentation work with survey data capturing documentation preferences and burnout. Our sample included 318 ambulatory physicians at MedStar Health. We conducted a mediation analysis to estimate if and how preferences mediated the relationship between after-hours documentation time and burnout. Our primary outcome was physician-reported burnout. We measured preferences for after-hours documentation work via a novel survey instrument (Burden Scenarios Assessment). We measured after-hours documentation time in the EHR as the total active time respondents spent documenting between 7 pm and 3 am. Results Physician preferences varied, with completing clinical documentation after clinic hours while at home the scenario rated most burdensome (52.8% of physicians), followed by dealing with prior authorization (49.5% of physicians). In mediation analyses, preferences partially mediated the relationship between after-hours documentation time and burnout. Discussion Physician preferences regarding EHR-based work play an important role in the relationship between after-hours documentation time and burnout. Conclusion Studies of EHR work and burnout should incorporate preferences, and operational leaders should assess preferences to better target interventions aimed at EHR-based contributors to burnout.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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