Electronic Health Record Burden Among Gastroenterology Providers Associated with Subspecialty and Training

Bali, Aman S.; Hashash, Jana G.; Picco, Michael F.; Kinnucan, Jami A.; Farraye, Francis A.

Electronic Health Record Burden Among Gastroenterology Providers Associated with Subspecialty and Training

Bali, Aman S.; Hashash, Jana G.; Picco, Michael F.; Kinnucan, Jami A.; Farraye, Francis A.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Use of the electronic health record (EHR) has become increasingly widespread. Higher EHR burden is associated with burnout, but this has not been specifically investigated among gastroenterology (GI) providers. METHODS: We retrospectively collected measures of EHR use for outpatient GI providers during a 6-month period. We compared metrics across provider sex, sub-specialty, and training (physicians vs non-physician providers [NPPs]). RESULTS: Data collected represented over 16,000 appointments from 41 providers across the Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology. Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and hepatology specialists spent more time per appointment in the EHR, clinical review, and outside regular hours compared to other sub-specialists. NPPs spent more EHR time than physicians. CONCLUSION: IBD and hepatology specialists and NPPs may have disproportionally high EHR burden. More work is needed to understand differences in provider workload to combat burnout.

View Resource
The American Journal of Gastroenterology
2023
Profession(s)
Physicians
Physician Assistants/Associates
Advanced Practice Nurses
Topic(s)
Burnout
Resource Types
Peer-Reviewed Research
Study Type(s)
Nonexperimental / Observational Study
Action Strategy Area(s)
Workload & Workflows
Setting(s)
Outpatient Facility
Academic Role(s)
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