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Impact of Scribes Upon Emergency Physician Self Assessed Authenticity Lisa M.Brown 1 Matthew J. Benage 1 Andrew V. Tran 1 Dane M. Chapman, MD, PhD 2 1.

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Presentation on theme: "Impact of Scribes Upon Emergency Physician Self Assessed Authenticity Lisa M.Brown 1 Matthew J. Benage 1 Andrew V. Tran 1 Dane M. Chapman, MD, PhD 2 1."— Presentation transcript:

1 Impact of Scribes Upon Emergency Physician Self Assessed Authenticity Lisa M.Brown 1 Matthew J. Benage 1 Andrew V. Tran 1 Dane M. Chapman, MD, PhD 2 1 2 nd year medical students at the University of Missouri-Columbia School of Medicine, Columbia, Missouri 2 Faculty Mentor, University of Missouri-Columbia School of Medicine, Columbia, Missouri

2 Background Emergency physicians are among the most likely to experience symptoms of burnout: – emotional exhaustion, increased cynicism, lack of empathy, self-doubt and lack of fulfillment – represent feelings of not being authentic or true to self Scribes are known to offset the administrative tasks of physicians Unknown whether scribes would impact physician burnout and job satisfaction

3 Objective To determine the impact of implementing a scribe program upon academic emergency department (ED) attending self-assessed authenticity and job satisfaction

4 Methods A randomized control group design: – ED Attendings with Scribes (N=8) randomly selected to work with experienced scribes (treatment group) – ED Attendings without Scribes (N=12) had overlapping shifts (control group) University Hospital ED

5 Methods Treatment group (N=8): – ED Attendings worked 3-5 shifts with experienced scribes over a 4 week study period, Summer 2013 – Scribes had >1,000 hours prior experience with national scribe companies – Scribes Duties: Completed the EMR for their assigned attending excluding physician order entry Followed up lab/radiology results, entered discharge instructions, obtained supplies, set up for procedures, etc.

6 Analysis Authentic Physician Self Assessment (APSA) used to measure end-of-shift authenticity and job satisfaction of physicians with and without scribes: –17-item instrument, utilizes a 1 to 6 Likert scale –Items from previously validated self assessment or independently derived a priori –Demonstrated high internal consistency (Chronbach Alpha=0.911) –Validated to assess five behavior constructs thought to influence physician authenticity and job satisfaction: 1.Clinical judgment (N=4 items) 2.Productivity (N=3 items) 3.Empathy toward patients (N=3 items) 4.Stress management (N=4 items) 5.Ability to share information (N=3 items) SPSS ® (20) one-way ANOVA utilized to compare control and treatment groups

7 Results APSA surveys (n=48) were collected from attendings with (n=24) and without (n=24) scribes Working with a scribe significantly improved ED physician APSA scores (F(1,46)= 6.463, p=0.014) 75.9 [73.6, 78.1] (scribe coverage) 68.3 [62.6, 74.0] (no scribe coverage) Unexpectedly, working with medical students also significantly improved ED physician APSA scores (F(1,30)= 5.07, p=0.033) 76.8 [73.4, 80.2] (medical student coverage) 69.1 [62.9, 75.3] (no medical student coverage)

8 Results

9 Conclusions ED Attendings working with experienced scribes had higher self-assessed feelings of authenticity and job satisfaction Implementation of scribe program may be an effective intervention to prevent and mitigate the risk of ED physician burnout


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