OBJECTIVES: To determine whether doctors have worse handwriting than other health professionals. DESIGN: Comparison of handwriting samples collected prospectively in a standardised 10 seconds' task. SETTING: Courses on quality improvement. SUBJECTS: 209 health care professionals attending the courses, including 82 doctors. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Legibility rated on a four-point scale by four raters. RESULTS: The handwriting of doctors was no less legible than that of non-doctors. Significantly lower legibility than average was associated with being an executive and being male. Overall legibility scores were normally distributed, with median legibility equivalent to a rating between "fair" and "good." CONCLUSION: This study fails to support the conventional wisdom that doctors' handwriting is worse than others.' Illegible writing is, however, an important cause of waste and hazard in medical care, but efforts to improve the safety and efficiency of written communication must approach the problem systemically- and assume that the problems are in inherent in average human writing-rather than treating doctors as if they were a special subpopulation.
OBJECTIVES: To determine whether doctors have worse handwriting than other health professionals. DESIGN: Comparison of handwriting samples collected prospectively in a standardised 10 seconds' task. SETTING: Courses on quality improvement. SUBJECTS: 209 health care professionals attending the courses, including 82 doctors. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Legibility rated on a four-point scale by four raters. RESULTS: The handwriting of doctors was no less legible than that of non-doctors. Significantly lower legibility than average was associated with being an executive and being male. Overall legibility scores were normally distributed, with median legibility equivalent to a rating between "fair" and "good." CONCLUSION: This study fails to support the conventional wisdom that doctors' handwriting is worse than others.' Illegible writing is, however, an important cause of waste and hazard in medical care, but efforts to improve the safety and efficiency of written communication must approach the problem systemically- and assume that the problems are in inherent in average human writing-rather than treating doctors as if they were a special subpopulation.
Authors: C Lovis; M K Chapko; D P Martin; T H Payne; R H Baud; P J Hoey; S D Fihn Journal: J Am Med Inform Assoc Date: 2001 Sep-Oct Impact factor: 4.497
Authors: Peter J Embi; Thomas R Yackel; Judith R Logan; Judith L Bowen; Thomas G Cooney; Paul N Gorman Journal: J Am Med Inform Assoc Date: 2004-04-02 Impact factor: 4.497
Authors: Clement J McDonald; J Marc Overhage; Burke W Mamlin; Paul D Dexter; William M Tierney Journal: J Am Med Inform Assoc Date: 2004 Mar-Apr Impact factor: 4.497