Statistics suggest that physicians are now spending a minimal amount of time in direct patient care, shockingly as little as 10 percent of their day. This proportion of time that physicians (and nurses) actually spend interacting with patients has been shrinking year by year.
There’s the need to communicate with other members of the expanding health care team, increased bureaucratic requirements, and over the last several years — the need to navigate and use the electronic medical record to enter notes and place orders. Of course, it’s not realistic to suggest that it’s possible for any doctor to spend 100 percent of the day in direct patient care, but 10 percent is quite frankly, a little sick.
If you ask any frontline physician or nurse at the moment what one of their biggest daily frustrations is, they will list health care information technology at or near the top of the list. It’s not that IT isn’t the future (because it definitely is). It’s just that the current crop of systems are largely slow, clunky and inefficient to navigate. They are not reconciled correctly with frontline clinical workflow and are turning physicians into “type and click bots.”
Unfortunately too, this problem particularly affects the generalist specialties including primary care, emergency and hospital medicine. These are the specialties where interactions with patients matter the most. For example, over a dozen clicks and a couple of minutes of time just to order a Tylenol? 5 minutes with a patient and then 30 minutes documenting it on a computer? Come on!
Having been in clinical practice for the best part of a decade and seen first hand in several hospitals this huge problem unfold, I am increasingly coming to the conclusion that medical scribes may be the ultimate answer to the problem of taking doctors back to where they belong. In direct patient care.
For anyone reading who is not familiar with what a scribe is, as the name suggests, it’s basically an individual who takes care of all the documentation requirements for physicians. They usually shadow the doctor who then tells them what to document, later co-signing the note after they’ve reviewed it. I’ve personally seen them working with emergency room physicians but am yet to use them myself (although am very keen to try). Scribes are becoming more popular, and a recent article in a major hospital medicine journal discussed them in detail. Here is a summary of why they could be a win-win solution:
- Physicians have more time to engage in direct patient care.
- Physicians can see more patients and be more productive.
- Increased physician job satisfaction, retention and lower burnout rates as they spend more of their day doing what they were trained to do and less time staring at a screen.
- The scribes themselves are often college-age students who want to get into a health care profession. They are paid an hourly rate and are very happy to be there learning about medicine.
- Hospitals benefit from happier staff, patients and higher productivity.
In fact, I’m sure many physicians would gladly pay $10 to 15 an hour out of their own pockets if it meant more overall productivity/RVUs, efficiency and a happier time at work. But it shouldn’t come to that, because if used correctly, they are an asset to any hospital or clinic.
The job of being a scribe is an ancient one, and has its roots in ancient Egypt where a scribe was considered one of the most important professions. Back then, they were used primarily for copying texts and making records using hieroglyphics. They were part of the royal court and did not have to pay taxes. With the advent of printing over the next few millenia, the scribe profession became obsolete. Wouldn’t it be interesting if 5,000 years on from ancient Egypt, the scribe profession came to the rescue of frontline health care?
Suneel Dhand is an internal medicine physician and author of Thomas Jefferson: Lessons from a Secret Buddha and High Percentage Wellness Steps: Natural, Proven, Everyday Steps to Improve Your Health & Well-being. He blogs at his self-titled site, Suneel Dhand.
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