Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate the impact of medical scribes on performance metrics in an academic ophthalmology practice across a variety of subspecialties
Design: Retrospective cohort study
Methods:
Setting: Single center clinical practice
Participants: 58,223 patient encounters from January 1, 2020 through November 10, 2023 were used. 2,269 clinic sessions were analyzed, with 686 clinic sessions without the presence of a scribe and 1,583 clinic sessions with the presence of a scribe
Procedures: Metrics were compared between scribed vs unscribed encounters for each individual doctor and then further compared by subspecialty. A linear mixed-effects model was used for overall differences and differences within the cornea subspecialty. A linear regression model was used for all other subspecialties.
Main Outcome Measures: Patients seen per hour, mean patient appointment time, mean patient wait time, mean chart closure time, and mean relative value units (RVUs) per hour.
Results: Patients seen per hour (mean ± standard deviation) were 3.45 ± 0.23 for all scribed encounters vs 3.12 ± 0.23 for unscribed encounters (P < 0.01). There was no significant difference in patient appointment times (mean ± standard error) of 74.56 ± 4.87 minutes for scribed encounters vs 73.34 ± 4.93 minutes for unscribed encounters (P = 0.3). Patient wait time (mean ± standard deviation) was 26.94 ± 3.55 minutes for all scribed encounters vs 29.12 ± 3.57 minutes for unscribed encounters (P < 0.01). Chart closure time (mean ± standard deviation) was 105.83 ± 11.56 minutes for all scribed encounters vs 93.82 ± 11.6 minutes for unscribed encounters (P < 0.01). Epic RVUs per hour (mean ± standard deviation) were 4.48 ± 0.65 for all scribed encounters vs 3.68 ± 0.65 for unscribed encounters (P < 0.01). All reported values are standardized to a 15% proportion of new patient encounters.
Conclusion: The use of scribes led to an increase in RVUs and patients seen per hour while decreasing patient wait time. While these trends varied amongst the subspecialties, all subspecialties benefited in at least one measure of efficiency in the presence of a scribe. Therefore, this study supports the utilization of scribes in an academic ophthalmology setting.
Received Date
18-Jun-2024
Accepted Date
23-Aug-2024
Recommended Citation
Flood, Justin T; Gill, Nathan; Winter, Halit; and Gill, Manjot K
(2024)
"Assessing the Impact of Medical Scribes in an Academic Ophthalmology Setting,"
Journal of Academic Ophthalmology: Vol. 16:
Iss.
1, Article 15.
Available at:
https://www.aupojournal.org/jao/vol16/iss1/15