| Literature DB >> 34524242 |
Margaret Ziemann1, Clese Erikson, Maddie Krips.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Clerical burdens have strained primary care providers already facing a shifting health care landscape and workforce shortages. These pressures may cause burnout and job dissatisfaction, with negative implications for patient care. Medical scribes, who perform real-time electronic health record documentation, have been posited as a solution to relieve clerical burdens, thus improving provider satisfaction and other outcomes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34524242 PMCID: PMC8428869 DOI: 10.1097/MLR.0000000000001605
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Care ISSN: 0025-7079 Impact factor: 3.178
FIGURE 1Flow diagram of literature synthesis review process.
Literature Review Study Descriptions
| Study Design | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| References | Scribe Model | Setting | Study Type | Methods | Participants; Data Source |
| Basu et al | Not specified | Multisite | Quantitative | Microsimulation | 643 US primary care practices Cost, revenue, and time use data |
| Danak et al | Not specified | Single site; FM clinic | Mixed methods | Quasi-experimental | 3 MD-scribe pairs, 34 patients Surveys, video recordings, MD interviews |
| Earls et al | External | Single site; academic FM practice | Mixed methods | Quasi-experimental | 6 MDs; 2 scribes; nurses; patients Surveys, time tracking data, focus groups |
| Gidwani et al | External | Single site; academic FM clinic | Quantitative | Experimental | 4 MDs MD and patient questionnaires, EHR timestamp data |
| Heckman et al | External | Single site; IM clinic | Quantitative | Quasi-experimental | 13 MDs; 2 scribes Surveys and productivity metrics |
| Howard et al | Not specified | Single site; community health center* | Mixed methods | Quasi-experimental | 6 clinical providers; 8 scribes Focus groups |
| Imdieke and Martel | Not specified | Single site; IM clinic*, safety net hospital | Quantitative | Quasi-experimental | 4 clinical providers; 6 support staff; 8 scribes; patients Surveys |
| Lowry et al | Internal; homegrown | Multisite; single health network* | Quantitative | Quasi-experimental | 51 clinical providers; 40 scribes; patients Surveys, provider self-reports, EHR data |
| Martel et al | Internal; homegrown | Multisite; academic hospital clinics* | Mixed methods | Quasi-experimental | 102 clinical providers, 28 from primary care; 45 scribes Surveys, interviews, EHR data |
| Miller et al | External | Medical group | Mixed methods | Quasi-experimental | 6 MDs |
| Mishra et al | External | Multisite; single health system | Quantitative | Quasi-experimental | 18 MDs Surveys |
| Misra-Herbert et al | Internal; existing staff | Multisite; single health system | Quantitative | Quasi-experimental | 18 MDs Outpatient progress notes |
| Morawski et al | External | Single site; academic IM practice | Quantitative | Quasi-experimental | 5 MDs; 1 PA; patients Surveys, productivity metrics |
| Phillips et al | Not specified | Single site; academic pediatric practice | Quantitative | Quasi-experimental | 5 MDs; 1 NP Billing system procedure codes |
| Platt and Altman | External | Single site; family practice group | Mixed methods | Quasi-experimental | 5 MDs; 3 scribes; 150 patients EHR data; surveys |
| Pozdnyakova et al | External | Single site; academic IM clinic | Mixed methods | Quasi-experimental | 6 MDs; 325 patients Surveys; MD logs, and interviews |
| Sattler et al | External | Single site; academic medical center | Qualitative | Nonexperimental | 4 MDs; 2 scribes Open text questionnaire |
| Taylor et al | Internal | Single site; military FM outpatient facility | Quantitative | Quasi-experimental | 2 MDs, 4 scribes Questionnaires |
| Yan et al | Internal; existing staff | Multisite; 6 health systems | Qualitative | Nonexperimental | 18 MDs; 17 clinical scribes; 36 patients Interview audio recordings |
| Yan et al | Internal; existing staff | Multisite; single health system | Quantitative | Nonexperimental | 123 patients of 8 physician-scribe pairs Surveys |
| Zallman et al | External | Single site; safety net clinic* | Mixed methods | Quasi-experimental | 5 MDs and their patients EMR productivity data, observation, surveys |
Safety net health care setting.
Including 3 primary care clinics.
Including 1 FM physician.
EHR indicates electronic health record; EMR, electronic medical record; FM, family medicine; IM, internal medicine; MD, medical doctor; NP, nurse practitioner; PA, physician assistant.
Literature Review Study Outcomes
| Studies (N=21) | Positive Outcomes | Neutral or Negative Outcomes |
|---|---|---|
| Productivity (n=11) | Significantly greater RVUs/hr, | Lower net revenue gains than control |
| Efficiency (n=14) | Decreased charting time | No difference in incomplete notes between intervention and control at 72 h |
| Provider experience (n=13) | Overall satisfaction; positive reaction to experience with scribes | Provider concerns about patient privacy or transparency |
| Patient experience (n=18) | Overall patient satisfaction or positive reaction to scribes | No change in patient satisfaction or neutral reaction to scribes |
| Documentation quality (n=7) | High levels of actual or perceived chart quality/accuracy | Physician and scribe concerns with documentation style or medical terminology |
| Staff experience (n=3) | Clinical staff satisfaction | Increase in scribe stress when role is added to existing duties due to workflow changes |
EHR indicates electronic health record; RVU, relative value unit.