Literature DB >> 28066851

Analysis of Smartphone Interruptions on Academic General Internal Medicine Wards. Frequent Interruptions may cause a 'Crisis Mode' Work Climate.

Alon Vaisman1, Robert C Wu.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Hospital-based medical services are increasingly utilizing team-based pagers and smartphones to streamline communications. However, an unintended consequence may be higher volumes of interruptions potentially leading to medical error. There is likely a level at which interruptions are excessive and cause a 'crisis mode' climate.
METHODS: We retrospectively collected phone, text messaging, and email interruptions directed to hospital-assigned smartphones on eight General Internal Medicine (GIM) teams at two tertiary care centres in Toronto, Ontario from April 2013 to September 2014. We also calculated the number of times these interruptions exceeded a pre-specified threshold per hour, termed 'crisis mode', defined as at least five interruptions in 30 minutes. We analyzed the correlation between interruptions and date, site, and patient volumes.
RESULTS: A total of 187,049 interruptions were collected over an 18-month period. Daily weekday interruptions rose sharply in the morning, peaking between 11 AM to 12 PM and measuring 4.8 and 3.7 mean interruptions/hour at each site, respectively. Mean daily interruptions per team totaled 46.2 ± 3.6 at Site 1 and 39.2 ± 4.2 at Site 2. The 'crisis mode' threshold was exceeded, on average, 2.3 times/day per GIM team during weekdays. In a multivariable linear regression analysis, site (β6.43 CI95% 5.44 - 7.42, p<0.001), day of the week (with Friday having the most interruptions) (β0.481 CI95% 0.236 - 0.730, p<0.05) and patient census (β1.55 CI95% 1.42 - 1.67, p<0.05) were all predictive of daily interruption volume although there was a significant interaction effect between site and patient census (β-0.941 CI95% -1.18 - -0.703, p<0.05).
CONCLUSION: Interruptions were related to site-specific features, including volume, suggesting that future interventions should target the culture of individual hospitals. Excessive interruptions may have implications for patient safety especially when exceeding a maximal threshold over short periods of time.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Communication; information technology; interruptions; smartphones

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28066851      PMCID: PMC5373749          DOI: 10.4338/ACI-2016-08-RA-0130

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Appl Clin Inform        ISSN: 1869-0327            Impact factor:   2.342


  35 in total

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Authors:  Johanna I Westbrook; Amanda Woods; Marilyn I Rob; William T M Dunsmuir; Richard O Day
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3.  Technology-mediated awareness: facilitating the handling of (un)wanted interruptions in a hospital setting.

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Authors:  Shaun P Patel; Jay S Lee; David N Ranney; Shaza N Al-Holou; Christopher M Frost; Meredith E Harris; Sarah A Lewin; Erqi Liu; Arin Madenci; Allen A Majkrzak; Jessica Nelson; Sarah F Peterson; Kerri A Serecky; David A Wilkinson; Brandon M Wojcik; Michael J Englesbe; Raymond J Lynch
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7.  Educational impact of using smartphones for clinical communication on general medicine: more global, less local.

Authors:  Robert C Wu; Katina Tzanetos; Dante Morra; Sherman Quan; Vivian Lo; Brian M Wong
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9.  An evaluation of the use of smartphones to communicate between clinicians: a mixed-methods study.

Authors:  Robert Wu; Peter Rossos; Sherman Quan; Scott Reeves; Vivian Lo; Brian Wong; Mark Cheung; Dante Morra
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10.  Smarter hospital communication: secure smartphone text messaging improves provider satisfaction and perception of efficacy, workflow.

Authors:  Jennifer A Przybylo; Ange Wang; Pooja Loftus; Kambria H Evans; Isabella Chu; Lisa Shieh
Journal:  J Hosp Med       Date:  2014-08-11       Impact factor: 2.960

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Authors:  Donald W Rucker
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4.  Factors Affecting User Acceptance in Overuse of Smartphones in Mobile Health Services: An Empirical Study Testing a Modified Integrated Model in South Korea.

Authors:  Seo-Joon Lee; Mun Joo Choi; Mi Jung Rho; Dai-Jin Kim; In Young Choi
Journal:  Front Psychiatry       Date:  2018-12-12       Impact factor: 4.157

Review 5.  Human factors recognition at virtual meetings and video conferencing: how to get the best performance from yourself and others.

Authors:  R S Oeppen; G Shaw; P A Brennan
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Review 6.  Virtual ARCP assessment and trainee feedback meetings: facilitating the best experience and practice.

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