| Literature DB >> 34179432 |
John T Ratelle1, Michelle Herberts2, Donna Miller1, Ashok Kumbamu3, Donna Lawson1, Eric Polley4, Thomas J Beckman5.
Abstract
Hospital medicine ward rounds are often conducted away from patients' bedsides, but it is unknown if more time-at-bedside is associated with improved patient outcomes. Our objective is to measure the association between "time-at-bedside," patient experience, and patient-clinician care agreement during ward rounds. Research assistants directly observed medicine services to quantify the amount of time spent discussing each patient's care inside versus outside the patient's room. "Time-at-bedside" was defined as the proportion of time spent discussing a patient's care in his or her room. Patient experience and patient-clinician care agreement both were measured immediately after ward rounds. Results demonstrated that the majority of patient and physicians completely agreement on planned tests (66.3%), planned procedures (79.7%), medication changes (50.6%), and discharge location (66.9%), but had no agreement on the patient's main concern (74.4%) and discharge date (50.6%). Time-at-bedside was not correlated with care agreement or patient experience (P > .05 for all comparisons). This study demonstrates that spending more time at the bedside during ward rounds, alone, is insufficient to improve patient experience.Entities:
Keywords: clinician–patient relationship; communication; medical education; team rounding
Year: 2021 PMID: 34179432 PMCID: PMC8205390 DOI: 10.1177/23743735211008303
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Patient Exp ISSN: 2374-3735
Patient, Clinician, and Rounding Characteristics.
| Characteristic | Number |
|---|---|
| Patient age, years, n (SD) | 64.9 (16.8) |
| Patient sex, female, n (%) | 58 (51.3) |
| Race, n (%) | |
| Caucasian | 107 (94.7) |
| Other/unknown | 6 (5.3) |
| Length of stay, days, median (IQR) | 5 (2–10) |
| Charleston Comorbidity Index, n (SD) | 1.8 (2.3) |
| Physician specialty, hospitalist, n (%) | 10 (50) |
| Physician sex, male, n (%) | 13 (65) |
| Physician experience, years, n (%) | 7.6 (8.9) |
| 0-5 | 11 (55) |
| 6-10 | 4 (20) |
| >10 | 5 (25) |
| Nurse sex, female, n (%) | 40 (83.3) |
| Nurse experience, years, n (SD) | 4.8 (8.1) |
| Nurse present during rounds, yes, n (%) | 82 (72.6) |
| Average duration of rounds, minutes, n (SD) | 162.92 (34) |
| Time per patient on rounds, minutes, n (SD) | 13.4 (7.2) |
| Percent of time in conference room | 24.16 |
| Percent of time in hallway | 35.88 |
| Percent of time in patient room | 39.95 |
| Patient on contact isolation, yes, n (%) | 30 (26.5) |
| Patient on home unit, yes, n (%) | 93 (82.3) |
Figure 1.Physician–patient plan of care agreement.
Figure 2.Nurse–patient plan of care agreement.
Associations between Time-At-Bedside and Plan of Care Agreement, and Time-At-Bedside and Patient Experience.
| Patient–physician plan of care agreement | β (95% CI) |
|
|---|---|---|
| Principal diagnosis | .01 (−0.03 to 0.05) | .5 |
| Patient’s chief concern | .01 (−0.03 to 0.05) | .66 |
| Planned tests | −.02 (−0.06 to 0.02) | .27 |
| Planned procedures/surgeries | −0.03 (-0.05 to -0.01) | .18 |
| Medication changes | .01 (−0.03 to 0.05) | .48 |
| Discharge date | −.01 (−0.05 to 0.03) | .48 |
| Discharge location | .02 (−0.02 to 0.06) | .24 |
| Patient experience | ||
| My doctors treated me with courtesy and respect. | ||
| Percent of “top box” | .05 (−0.01 to 0.1) | .085 |
| Percent of not “top box” | ||
| My doctors listened carefully to me. | ||
| Percent of “top box” | .02 (−0.04 to 0.08) | .54 |
| Percent of not “top box” | ||
| My doctors explained things in a way I could understand. | ||
| Percent of “top box” | .02 (−0.01 to 0.04) | .59 |
| Percent of not “top box” |