Allocation of Internai Medicine Resident Time in a Swiss Hospital: A Time and Motion Study , the Médical Day (MeDay) Study

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Version: After imprimatur
Serval ID
serval:BIB_1377E4B5F277
Type
PhD thesis: a PhD thesis.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Allocation of Internai Medicine Resident Time in a Swiss Hospital: A Time and Motion Study , the Médical Day (MeDay) Study
Author(s)
Wenger Nathalie
Director(s)
Waeber Gérard
Codirector(s)
Marques-Vidal Pedro
Institution details
Université de Lausanne, Faculté de biologie et médecine
Address
Faculté de biologie et de médecine
Université de Lausanne
CH-1015 Lausanne
SUISSE

Publication state
Accepted
Issued date
2017
Language
english
Abstract
Background: Little current evidence documents how internal medicine residents spend their time at work, particularly with regard to the proportions of time spent in direct patient care versus using computers.
Objective: To describe how residents allocate their time during day and evening hospital shifts.
Design: Time and motion study.
Setting: Internal medicine residency at a university hospital in Switzerland, May to July 2015.
Participants: 36 internal medicine residents with an average of 29 months of postgraduate training.
Measurements: Trained observers recorded the residents' activities using a tablet-based application. Twenty-two activities were categorized as directly related to patients, indirectly related to patients, communication, academic, nonmedical tasks, and transition. In addition, the presence of a patient or colleague and use of a computer or telephone during each activity was recorded.
Results: Residents were observed for a total of 696.7 hours. Day shifts lasted 11.6 hours (1.6 hours more than scheduled). During these shifts, activities indirectly related to patients accounted for 52.4% of the time, and activities directly related to patients accounted for 28.0%. Residents spent an average of 1.7 hours with patients, 5.2 hours using computers, and 13 minutes doing both. Time spent using a computer was scattered throughout the day, with the heaviest use after 6:00 p.m.
Limitation: The study involved a small sample from 1 institution.
Conclusion: At this Swiss teaching hospital, internal medicine residents spent more time at work than scheduled. Activities indirectly related to patients predominated, and about half the workday was spent using a computer.
Primary Funding Source: Information Technology Depart- ment and Department of Internal Medicine of Lausanne University Hospital.
Create date
31/08/2017 9:55
Last modification date
20/08/2019 13:42
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