Abstract

BackgroundPhysician burnout is a major problem in the United States. Small studies suggest scribes can improve clinician satisfaction, but scribe programs have not been evaluated using separate control groups or structured measures of electronic health record (EHR) use. MethodsWe conducted a pre-post, non-randomized controlled evaluation of a remote scribe pilot program introduced in September 2019 in an academic primary care practice. Scribes were paired with physicians via an audio-only cellphone connection to hear and document in real-time. Physician wellness was measured with the 10-item Mini-Z and 16-item Professional Fulfillment Index. EHR use was measured using vendor-derived platforms that provide routine EHR-related data. Results37 of 38 scribe users (97.4%) and 68 of 160 potential control physicians (42.5%) completed both pre and post intervention questionnaires. Compared with controls, scribe users had improvements in Mini-Z wellness metrics including Joyful Workplace (mean improvement 2.83, 95%CI 0.60, 5.06) and a single-item dichotomized burnout measure (OR 0.15, 95%CI 0.03, 0.71). There were significant reductions among scribe users compared to controls in total EHR time per 8 scheduled hours (−1.14 h, 95%CI -1.55, −0.72), and an increase in the percentage of orders with team contribution (10.4%, 95%CI 5.2, 15.6). These findings remained significant in adjusted analyses. Conclusions/implicationsA remote scribe program was associated with improvements in physician wellness and reduced EHR use. Healthcare organizations can consider scribe programs to help improve wellness among their physician workforce.

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