Physician activities during time out of the examination room.
Adult; Female; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Ohio; Aged; *Family Practice; *Patient Care; Task Performance and Analysis; Time and Motion Studies; Medical; *Practice Management
PURPOSE: Comprehensive medical care requires direct physician-patient contact, other office-based medical activities, and medical care outside of the office. This study was a systematic investigation of family physician office-based activities outside of the examination room. METHODS: In the summer of 2000, 6 medical students directly observed and recorded the office-based activities of 27 northeastern Ohio community-based family physicians during 1 practice day. A checklist was used to record physician activity every 20 seconds outside of the examination room. Observation excluded medical care provided at other sites. Physicians were also asked to estimate how they spent their time on average and on the observed day. RESULTS: The average office day was 8 hours 8 minutes. On average, 20.1 patients were seen and physicians spent 17.5 minutes per patient in direct contact time. Office-based time outside of the examination room averaged 3 hours 8 minutes or 39% of the office practice day; 61% of that time was spent in activities related to medical care. Charting (32.9 minutes per day) and dictating (23.4 minutes per day) were the most common medical activities. Physicians overestimated the time they spent in direct patient care and medical activities. None of the participating practices had electronic medical records. CONCLUSIONS: If office-based, medically related activities were averaged over the number of patients seen in the office that day, the average office visit time per patient would increase by 7 minutes (40%). Care delivery extends beyond direct patient contact. Models of health care delivery need to recognize this component of care.
Gilchrist Valerie; McCord Gary; Schrop Susan Labuda; King Bridget D; McCormick Kenelm F; Oprandi Allison M; Selius Brian A; Cowher Michael; Maheshwary Rishi; Patel Falguni; Shah Ami; Tsai Bonny; Zaharna Mia
Annals of family medicine
2005
2005-12
Article information provided for research and reference use only. All rights are retained by the journal listed under publisher and/or the creator(s).
<a href="http://doi.org/10.1370/afm.391" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">10.1370/afm.391</a>
Stages of change analysis of smokers attending clinics for the medically underserved.
Adult; Humans; Male; Socioeconomic Factors; Surveys and Questionnaires; Prospective Studies; *Health Behavior; *Smoking Cessation/psychology/statistics & numerical data; Counseling; Medically Underserved Area; Models; Theoretical
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether smokers at clinics providing care for the medically underserved can be characterized according to the transtheoretical stages of change model. STUDY DESIGN: Prospective, descriptive study. POPULATION: Smokers in the waiting rooms of clinics providing care for the medically underserved. OUTCOMES MEASURED: Standardized questionnaires that assessed stages of change, processes of change, decisional balance, and self-efficacy and temptation. RESULTS: The smoking rate of subjects interviewed at 4 clinics was 44%. Two hundred current smokers completed the questionnaires. Smokers claiming that they planned to quit within 6 months scored higher on experiential process statements that are consistent with quitting smoking than did smokers who claimed they were not planning to quit within 6 months. They also scored higher on behavioral statements related to quitting. Concerns about the negative aspects of smoking were more important to smokers planning to quit than to smokers not planning to quit, whereas the statements assessing positive aspects of smoking were rated the same. Fifty-five percent of the smokers were smoking a pack or more each day and reported smoking more during negative situations and from habit than did smokers who smoked less than a pack a day. CONCLUSIONS: Smokers planning to quit who still smoke at least a pack a day may benefit from counseling to decrease smoking for specific reasons or from pharmacologic aids. Smokers at the clinics who planned to quit smoking reported experiences and behaviors that were consistent with their stated desire to quit and should be counseled in the same fashion as smokers from more traditional practices.
Gil Karen M; Schrop Susan Labuda; Kline Sarah C; Kimble Emily A; McCord Gary; McCormick Kenelm F; Gilchrist Valerie J
The Journal of Family Practice
2002
2002-12
Article information provided for research and reference use only. All rights are retained by the journal listed under publisher and/or the creator(s).