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DOI: 10.1055/s-0041-1732402
The Effect of Electronic Health Record Burden on Pediatricians' Work–Life Balance and Career Satisfaction
- Abstract
- Background and Significance
- Objectives
- Methods
- Results
- Discussion
- Conclusion
- Clinical Relevance Statement
- Multiple Choice Questions
- References
Abstract
Objectives To examine pediatricians' perspectives on administrative tasks including electronic health record (EHR) documentation burden and their effect on work–life balance and life and career satisfaction.
Methods We analyzed 2018 survey data from the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) Pediatrician Life and Career Experience Study (PLACES), a longitudinal cohort study of early and midcareer pediatricians. Cohorts graduated from residency between 2002 and 2004 or 2009 and 2011. Participants were randomly selected from an AAP database (included all pediatricians who completed U.S. pediatric residency programs). Four in 10 pediatricians (1,796 out of 4,677) were enrolled in PLACES in 2012 and considered participants in 2018. Data were weighted to adjust for differences between study participants and the overall population of pediatricians. Chi-square and multivariable logistic regression examined the association of EHR burden on work–life balance (three measures) and satisfaction with work, career, and life (three measures). Responses to an open-ended question on experiences with administrative tasks were reviewed.
Results A total of 66% of pediatrician participants completed the 2018 surveys (1,192 of 1,796; analytic sample = 1,069). Three-fourths reported EHR documentation as a major or moderate burden. Half reported such burden for billing and insurance and 42.7% for quality and performance measurement. Most pediatricians reported satisfaction with their jobs (86.7%), careers (84.5%), and lives (66.2%). Many reported work–life balance challenges (52.5% reported stress balancing work and personal responsibilities). In multivariable analysis, higher reported EHR burden was associated with lower scores on career and life satisfaction measures and on all three measures of work–life balance. Open-ended responses (n = 467) revealed several themes. Two predominant themes especially supported the quantitative findings—poor EHR functionality and lack of support for administrative burdens.
Conclusion Most early to midcareer pediatricians experience administrative burdens with EHRs. These experiences are associated with worse work–life balance including more stress in balancing responsibilities and less career and life satisfaction.
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Background and Significance
Clinical documentation has been digitized substantially over the last decade. In 2015, 96% of hospitals used certified electronic health records (EHRs),[1] and EHR use by office-based pediatricians increased from 58% in 2009 to 79% in 2012 and to 94% in 2016.[2] [3] Although EHRs are standard practice, pediatricians must adhere to clinical documentation requirements developed in 1997 when nearly all pediatric offices documented on paper.[4] Electronic documentation and team-based charting created conflicts with outdated regulations and introduced new problems including documentation burden, chart bloat, and information overload.[5] [6] [7]
Concerns are growing about physician burnout and the negative impact on patient care, including increased medical errors.[2] [3] [4] Use of EHRs has been linked to higher risk for physician burnout.[8] Recent studies indicate that a large portion of physician time is spent on EHR documentation. A study of adult physicians in ambulatory settings found for every hour in patient encounters, physicians work 2 additional hours on EHRs and administrative tasks during office hours, plus 1 to 2 hours nightly from home.[9] A study of primary care physicians reported that they spent 6 hours interacting with the EHR on work days,[10] and physicians in an academic faculty group spent up to 3 hours on the EHR on days without any appointments.[11] Increased self-reported physician workload was associated with increased asynchronous alerts or inbox notifications,[12] [13] and high volumes of patient call messages have been linked to burnout.[14] Less research has focused on pediatricians or the association of EHR use and work–life balance and satisfaction.
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Objectives
Our goals were to examine (1) early and midcareer pediatricians' perspectives on administrative tasks, including EHR documentation burden; (2) existing approaches to reduce burden; (3) variation of perspectives by specialization (e.g., generalist, subspecialist, or hospitalist); and (4) the effect of EHR burden on work–life balance and satisfaction with work.
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Methods
Participants
We analyzed survey data collected in 2018 from the national American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) Pediatrician Life and Career Experience Study (PLACES). PLACES is a cohort study tracking the work and life experiences of pediatricians across their career continuums.[15] [16] Pediatricians who agreed to participate in this longitudinal study are surveyed twice annually by email and mail, depending on preference. The PLACES extensive annual survey covers several domains (e.g., work characteristics, satisfaction, work–life balance, life experiences). A shorter annual survey covers a single topic selected by the participants. In 2018, “administrative tasks” was chosen.
Study cohorts graduated from residency between 2002 and 2004 or 2009 and 2011. PLACES participants were randomly selected from an AAP database that included all pediatricians who completed U.S. pediatric residency programs, both AAP members and nonmembers. Four in 10 pediatricians (1,925 out of 4,677) invited to participate in PLACES initially signed up for the longitudinal study in 2012. Of these, 93.7% (1,804) completed the first survey and were thereafter considered PLACES participants; eight of these participants either passed away or asked to be dropped from the study.
Compared with the target population of pediatricians (all pediatricians who graduated residency between 2002 and 2004 or 2009 and 2011), study participants were significantly more likely to be female, AAP members, and graduates of U.S. medical schools. Therefore, two types of weights were calculated to adjust for differences in study and target cohorts. The first weight was a nonresponse weight to adjust for differences between participants and the target sample of pediatricians for sex and AAP membership status. The second weight was a poststratification weight to adjust for differences between medical school location of participants and information on pediatricians from the American Board of Pediatrics. Adjusted weights were applied to all analyses presented in this study. Additional details regarding PLACES methodology, including target population, sample size analysis, and nonresponse and poststratification weights have been described previously.[15] The AAP Institutional Review Board approved the study and all surveys.
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Measures
After a literature review, the AAP PLACES Project Advisory Committee and other practicing pediatricians advised on development of the questions, which were primarily fixed-response questions.
In the shorter 2018 survey, we queried participants about their perceived burden for three administrative tasks, including (1) EHR documentation; (2) billing, preauthorization, and other insurance tasks; and (3) quality and performance measurements (survey questions provided as [Appendix A]). Response options included no, minor, moderate, and major burden. We asked fixed-response questions regarding seven approaches that might reduce administrative burdens, the level of input participants had on EHR documentation practices at their workplace, and experiences with scribes assisting with documentation. The survey included one open-ended question asking about additional experiences with administrative tasks.
Abbreviation: EHR, electronic health record.
In the 2018 larger PLACES survey, we asked participants about their specialty (generalist, hospitalist, subspecialist, other), work hours (full-time, part-time), practice ownership (owner, employee, or other), work–life balance (three measures), and satisfaction (three measures). Work–life balance measures included (1) perceived stress balancing work and personal responsibilities; (2) satisfaction with time for personal interests or hobbies; and (3) frequency of work performed at home, such as patient charting. Satisfaction measures included agreement that (1) work is personally rewarding; (2) career as a physician is satisfying; and (3) satisfaction with overall life. Response options are described below.
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Data Analysis
Quantitative Data
We linked data from two PLACES surveys conducted in 2018 with information collected during study recruitment in 2012 on age, sex, race and ethnicity, and medical school location.
We used chi-square tests to examine variations in pediatrician perceptions of (1) burden from administrative tasks (major or moderate vs. minor or no burden) and (2) approaches to reduce burdens (strongly agree vs. agree, disagree, strongly disagree) by career specialty (generalist, subspecialist, hospitalist). We used McNemar tests to identify which of the three administrative tasks were rated as most burdensome (moderate or major burden) for each specialty.
We used chi-square tests to examine associations of pediatrician-reported EHR burden (major or moderate vs. minor or no burden) with work–life balance and satisfaction measures. Work–life balance responses were dichotomized as follows: (1) perceived stress balancing work and personal responsibilities (very or moderately vs. little or not at all stressed); (2) satisfaction with time for personal interests or hobbies (very satisfied or satisfied vs. neutral, dissatisfied, or very dissatisfied); and (3) frequency of work performed at home, such as patient charting (every work day vs. more than once a week but less than every day, about once a week, about once a month, or a few times a year or never). Satisfaction measures were dichotomized as follows: (1) work is personally rewarding (strongly agree or agree vs. neither agree nor disagree, disagree, or strongly disagree); (2) career as a physician is satisfying (strongly agree or agree vs. neither agree nor disagree, disagree, or strongly disagree); and (3) satisfaction with overall life (completely or very vs. somewhat, not very, or not at all satisfied).
For the work–life balance and satisfaction measures that varied significantly by EHR burden, we used multivariable logistic regression to examine the independent effect of burden controlling for pediatrician self-reported level of input on EHR implementation and staffing, age cohort (between 2009 and 2011 or 2002 and 2004 residency graduate), sex, race and ethnicity, medical school location, married or partnered, children, career specialty (generalist, subspecialist, or hospitalist), practice ownership, and part-time hours. Characteristics included in the models were based on prior work[17] [18] and a priori hypotheses that they would be related to work–life balance and satisfaction.
The number of cases in each analysis varied slightly because of missing values for specific questions. All data presented are weighted as described above. Analyses were conducted with IBM SPSS Statistics 25 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, Illinois, United States), with p ≤ 0.05.
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Qualitative Data
Two authors (M.P.F. and C.A.S.) reviewed all open-ended responses to the following question: “What more should we know about your experiences with administrative tasks?” They created a list of codes and used a conventional content analysis approach[19] and ATLAS.ti to tag and assess all comments. Codes were updated during iterative readings as part of the coding process. Coding agreement was 86%; discrepancies between the authors were resolved through discussion. Themes were identified to help illustrate the data.
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Results
Sixty-six percent of PLACES participants completed both 2018 surveys (1,192 of 1,796). The analytic sample was restricted to 1,069 participants, who completed at least one question on administrative tasks and worked in general pediatrics (n = 481), subspecialty care (n = 481), and hospitalist care (n = 107) in 2018. The 123 participants excluded were either not working or not providing direct patient care in 2018, reported another nonclinical position, or were in fellowship training.
Respondent Characteristics
Two-thirds of responding pediatricians were women (64.6%) and white, non-Hispanic (64.9%), with a mean age of 43 years (median = 43; standard deviation = 4.7). Most were graduates of U.S. medical schools (78.4%), married (88.4%), and had children (86.0%). Eight in 10 (78.5%) were employees, 17.4% were full- or part-owners, and 4.1% reported other (e.g., independent contractor). Twenty-three percent were working part-time, including 34.7% of women and 1.9% of men.
Sixty-five pediatricians (6.1%) reported using a scribe. Among scribe users, 0% rated their service as poor, 18.2% as fair, 35.1% as good, 22.1% as very good, and 24.7% as excellent. One-third or fewer of pediatricians reported having moderate or major input in procedures and staffing for administrative tasks, including EHR documentation (25.9%); billing, preauthorization, and other insurance (15.3%); and quality and performance measurement (33.7%).
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Administrative Tasks—Burden and Approaches to Reduce Burden
Three-quarters of pediatricians (73.6%) reported EHR documentation was a major or moderate burden. Half (49.0%) reported such burden for billing and insurance and 42.7% for quality and performance measurement (QI). General pediatricians and subspecialists were more likely than hospitalists to report that EHR documentation (74.5, 75.3, and 62.3%, respectively, p < 0.05) and billing and insurance (51.9, 50.7, and 28.4%, p < 0.001) tasks were major or moderate burdens ([Fig. 1]). For each specialty group, McNemar tests comparing responses to each of three tasks found more pediatricians in each group reported EHR documentation as more burdensome than billing and insurance and QI tasks (p < 0.001 for all comparisons). For example, among generalists, 75.5% reported EHR documentation as a major or moderate burden compared with billing and insurance (51.9%, p < 0.001) or quality and performance measurement (47.7%, p < 0.001).
Regarding approaches pediatricians endorsed to help reduce physician administrative burdens, 90% strongly agreed (44.7%) or agreed (45.5%) with improving EHR functionality ([Fig. 2]). Nine in 10 pediatricians also strongly agreed or agreed that providing protected time for tasks (89.9%), shifting tasks to other team members (86.5%), and obtaining physician input on administrative structures and tasks (92.9%) would reduce burden.
Pediatrician views on top approaches to reduce administrative burden varied across specialty, with five of seven approaches varying modestly. When examining “strongly agree” responses, subspecialists were most likely to strongly agree that improved EHR functionality (50.0% compared with 40.4% of generalists and 39.6% of hospitalists, p < 0.01), adding scribes to the team (27.8, 18.6, and 19.0%, p < 0.01), and shifting work to other team members (36.2, 31.4, and 28.1%, p < 0.05) might reduce burden. Hospitalists were most likely to strongly agree that protected time in schedules for administrative tasks might help (44.3% compared with 31.5% of generalists and 34.7% of subspecialists, p < 0.05). While few pediatricians (11.2%) strongly agreed that increased patient time might help, generalists were most likely to strongly agree with this approach (15.7 vs. 6.6% of hospitalists and 7.7% of subspecialists, p < 0.001).
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Association of EHR Documentation Burden with Work–Life Balance and Satisfaction
Over half of pediatricians (52.5%) reported being very or moderately stressed balancing work and personal responsibilities. Only 32.2% were very satisfied or satisfied with their personal time, and 28.1% brought work home daily. Pediatricians reporting EHR documentation as a major or moderate burden were more likely to report stress balancing responsibilities and bringing work home daily and less likely to report satisfaction with their personal time ([Fig. 3]). Sixty-one percent of pediatricians reporting EHR documentation as a major or moderate burden compared with 30.1% of those reporting less burden reported being very or moderately stressed balancing work and personal responsibilities, p < 0.001.
Large majorities of pediatricians strongly agreed or agreed that their work was personally rewarding (86.7%) and their career as a physician was satisfying (84.5%). Two-thirds (66.2%) reported they were completely or very satisfied with their overall life. Pediatricians who reported that EHR documentation was a major or moderate burden were less likely to agree that their career as a physician was satisfying and to report that they were completely or very satisfied with their overall life ([Fig. 3]). Only 62.7% of pediatricians reporting EHR documentation was a major or moderate burden also reported being completely or very satisfied with their life compared with 76.0% of those reporting less burden (p < 0.001).
Similar patterns were found in the multivariable logistic regression models ([Table 1]). Pediatricians reporting more EHR documentation burden were more likely to be stressed balancing work and personal responsibilities and to bring work home daily (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] = 3.79, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 2.76–5.19 and aOR = 3.05, 95% CI = 2.08–4.47, respectively). They reported less satisfaction with personal time (aOR = 0.43, 95% CI = 0.32–0.59), career (aOR = 0.63, 95% CI = 0.41–0.98), and life overall (aOR = 0.49, 95% CI = 0.35–0.69). EHR burden was related to all five measures of work–life balance and satisfaction and was a bigger factor in the models than any of the pediatrician characteristics (gender, race, medical school, marital status, and having children).
Abbreviation: EHR, electronic health record.
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Qualitative Data
Among the 1,069 study participants, 467 responded to the question, “What more should we know about your experiences with administrative tasks?” [Table 2] lists major categories used to summarize participants' comments as well as example quotes. Two predominant themes that supported the quantitative findings were (1) documenting the patient visit in the EHR, including EHR functionality and (2) ways that might help physicians reduce their administrative burdens, such as designated time in physician schedules, dictation software and training on EHR systems, and support by administrators. Many commented on support staff and scribes taking on some documentation tasks which might allow physicians to work at the top of their license. Participants provided both positive and negative comments about scribes. Negative comments focused on costs associated with adding scribes to the team and interruptions to the workflow. One participant commented, “A scribe has been offered to physicians in my practice, but each physician is responsible for that cost. That is not much of an incentive! I would prefer more time to be built into my schedule for EHR documentation than having a scribe.” Pediatricians expressed that patient documentation in the EHR is a huge burden, including the time needed to adequately document visits and number of documentation requirements. They commented on the functionality of the EHR (e.g., system is not user-friendly, customizable, or developed for pediatrics) and how documentation burden negatively affects their well-being, including work–life balance. One pediatrician commented, “It is an incredible burden to finish working a 10-hour day, 4–5 days per week, with at least 20 EHR charts to finish (about 2 hours of work). I leave the office as soon as all the tasks are done that have to be done at the office, so I can spend 30–60 minutes with my son before he goes to bed. Then, I chart for 2 hours. This is not sustainable.”
Abbreviations: EHR, electronic health record; EMR, electronic medical record.
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Discussion
Among a national sample of early and midcareer pediatricians, three-quarters reported being highly burdened by EHR documentation. Ninety percent believed that improving the functionality of the EHR, protecting time in physician's schedules for administrative tasks, shifting tasks to other team members, and obtaining physician input might help reduce the burden of administrative tasks on physicians. We also found consistent, statistically significant negative associations between self-reported EHR burden and measures of pediatricians' work–life balance and work and life satisfaction. More than half reported stress balancing work and personal responsibilities. Those who reported more burden with EHR documentation were twice as likely as those reporting less burden to report stress-balancing responsibilities and bringing work home daily. They were less likely to report satisfaction with their personal time, career as a physician, and overall life.
The impact of EHRs on work–life balance might be particularly salient in pediatrics. The majority of early and midcareer pediatricians are women with children.[15] Research on physicians at academic medical centers found that women spend more time on EHRs each day than men.[20] [21] Other studies found that women are more likely to report burnout,[22] [23] [24] and have more household and childcare responsibilities[25] [26] [27] and report more challenges with work–life balance.[17] [27] [28] [29] [30]
Most pediatricians in our study reported that improving EHR functionality might reduce administrative burdens for physicians. This also emerged as a theme in our qualitative analysis. One participant suggested that preparing “ready-made note templates” was worth the initial time investment. Participants noted frustration with the high number of clicks they needed to make in the EHR. Lack of pediatric functionalities in EHRs has been extensively documented.[3] [31] [32] [33] EHRs require time-consuming, granular data documentation, and it is a reasonable expectation that entered data can be reused to complete forms required in pediatrics (e.g., school and administrative documents). However, lack of standardized data requests and forms and the need to enter these data in an EHR can be time-consuming and burdensome and result in duplicate documentation. Creation of essential clinical documentation components[34] and including ideal and accessible pediatric EHR functions[35] might reduce burden on pediatricians.
While pediatricians in our study believed that obtaining physician input would reduce administrative burdens, only a quarter of these pediatricians reported they have any input related to their EHRs. One of the consequences of EHR use has been the redistribution of work to physicians, such as through asynchronous messaging (“the burden of the inbox”)[13] without the addition of allotted time. Prior to EHRs with patient portals, patients would call the office and most needs would be addressed by office staff. While portals allow some self-service by patients reducing pediatrician work load, they can also be set-up to allow patients to reach physicians directly, adding to pediatrician's workload—a feature that has been shown to increase burnout.[14] Organizations have started to address this issue. Reliant Medical Group reduced physician inbox messages by 25% through rules that routed new messages to the appropriate staff or team member.[36]
A recent AAP policy statement highlighted the different electronic documentation needs for pediatricians and a lack of best practices in pediatric populations.[35] It points out that “[m]ultiple stakeholders with differing priorities […] have contributed to increased documentation burden and physician burnout.” It also discusses several tools to reduce provider documentation burden, including speech recognition software, scribes, and new technologies. Half of our study participants thought adding a scribe to the team would help reduce documentation burden but only 6% reported using a scribe. While these participants had high ratings of their scribes, we found mixed results in the qualitative data, with cost and workflow being raised as issues. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) and American Medical Association (AMA) are working on changes to decrease administrative documentation burdens and credit providers for the total time spent on outpatient encounters including previsit (e.g., chart review; paperwork, forms, and letters) and postvisit (e.g., laboratory review) time, in addition to patient care, if they all occur on the same day.[37]
Limitations
Study limitations include that data are self-reported and limited to early and midcareer pediatricians. Generalizability of findings to other specialties or career stages remains unclear. Although the response rate to the study survey was high, the initial project sign-up rate was 41%.[15] We made efforts to account for nonresponse bias by using a data-weighting procedure. Although PLACES is a longitudinal study, the data presented in the current study are from one year (2018) and therefore do not permit an understanding of cause and effect. For example, it is possible that being stressed about work–life balance makes documentation feel more burdensome. We did not collect data on EHR vendors, implementation, and training and support for physicians, which may have rendered some EHRs more useable for physicians than others. In addition, questions on overall categories of administrative burdens (e.g., EHR documentation; billing, preauthorization, and other insurance; quality and performance measurement) and approaches that might reduce administrative tasks (e.g., shift administrative work to other team members; improve the functionality of the EHR) were broad to understand which general types of tasks were most burdensome for pediatricians and overall solutions, respectively. Future work might focus on which EHR tasks could be successfully shifted to other team members and specific input pediatricians would like to have regarding EHRs. Also, this survey was conducted before the CMS and AMA coding and documentation changes went into effect at the beginning of 2021.[37] Lastly, the global pandemic in 2020 may have impacted pediatrician perspectives since we conducted our survey.
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Conclusion
In summary, our study documented that three in four early and midcareer pediatricians are highly burdened by EHR documentation and these pediatricians struggle with work–life balance and are less satisfied in their careers and overall life. Nine in 10 participants felt that EHR burden would be improved with increased EHR functionality, protected time for administrative tasks, shifting tasks to other team members, and obtaining physician input. A multifactorial approach is needed to successfully reduce the burden, including improved functionality by EHR vendors and at the local level and continued advocacy by pediatricians to ensure input and feedback.
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Clinical Relevance Statement
In our survey, 73.6% of pediatricians surveyed reported being highly burdened by EHR documentation. Pediatricians experiencing higher burden also reported more work–life balance issues and less career satisfaction. Nine in 10 believed improving EHR functionality would reduce administrative tasks for physicians.
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Multiple Choice Questions
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Which type of administrative task is most commonly reported by early and midcareer pediatricians as being burdensome?
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Billing and insurance.
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EHR documentation.
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Laboratory result inquiries.
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Quality and performance measurement.
Correct Answer: The correct answer is option b. Three-quarters of pediatricians (73.6%) reported EHR documentation was a major or moderate burden. Half (49.0%) reported such burden for billing and insurance and 42.7% for quality and performance measurement (QI). Majorities of general pediatricians (74.5%), subspecialists (75.3%), and hospitalists (62.3%) reported that EHR documentation was a major or moderate burden.
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Which of the following measures were found to be negatively associated with moderate to severe EHR documentation burden on pediatrician?
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Life satisfaction; work–life balance; career satisfaction.
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Work–life balance; pediatrician income; patient volume.
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Career satisfaction; vacation time; office staff work satisfaction.
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None was negatively associated.
Correct Answer: The correct answer is option a. In multivariable analysis, controlling for pediatrician characteristics, pediatricians reporting more EHR documentation burden were more likely to be stressed balancing work and personal responsibilities and to bring work home daily (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] = 3.79, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 2.76–5.19 and aOR = 3.05, 95% CI = 2.08–4.47, respectively). They reported less satisfaction with personal time (aOR = 0.43, 95% CI = 0.32–0.59), career (aOR = 0.63, 95% CI = 0.41–0.98), and life overall (aOR = 0.49, 95% CI = 0.35–0.69). EHR burden was related to five measures of work–life balance and satisfaction and was a bigger factor in the models than any of the pediatrician characteristics.
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Conflict of Interest
None declared.
Acknowledgments
We would like to acknowledge the contribution of the PLACES participants.
Protection of Human and Animal Subjects
The study was performed in compliance with the World Medical Association Declaration of Helsinki on Ethnical Principles for Medical Research Involving Human Subjects and was reviewed and approved by the AAP Institutional Review Board.
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- 32 Dufendach K, Eichenberger J, McPheeters M. et al. Core Functionality in Pediatric Electronic Health Records [Internet]. Rockville, MD: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (US); 2015. Apr. Report No.: 15–EHC014-EF. PMID: 25950078; 2015
- 33 Lehmann CU. Council on Clinical Information Technology. Pediatric aspects of inpatient health information technology systems. Pediatrics 2015; 135 (03) e756-e768
- 34 Sutton DE, Fogel JR, Giard AS, Gulker LA, Ivory CH, Rosa AM. Defining an essential clinical dataset for admission patient history to reduce nursing documentation burden. Appl Clin Inform 2020; 11 (03) 464-473
- 35 O'Donnell HC, Suresh S. COUNCIL ON CLINICAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY. Electronic documentation in pediatrics: the rationale and functionality requirements. Pediatrics 2020; 146 (01) e20201682
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36
Massachusetts Medical Society.
Changing the EHR from a liability to an asset to reduce physician burnout. The Reliant Medical Group Story. Published April 2019. Accessed December 15, 2020 at: www.mhalink.org/MHADocs/Resources/2019/19-04-22PR_Changing_EHR_PhysBurnout_0119_FINAL.pdf
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37
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
Reducing burden | CMS. Accessed January 28, 2021 at: https://www.cms.gov/About-CMS/Components/CPI/Reducing-Burden
Address for correspondence
Publication History
Received: 14 April 2021
Accepted: 15 June 2021
Article published online:
02 August 2021
© 2021. Thieme. All rights reserved.
Georg Thieme Verlag KG
Rüdigerstraße 14, 70469 Stuttgart, Germany
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- 33 Lehmann CU. Council on Clinical Information Technology. Pediatric aspects of inpatient health information technology systems. Pediatrics 2015; 135 (03) e756-e768
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-
36
Massachusetts Medical Society.
Changing the EHR from a liability to an asset to reduce physician burnout. The Reliant Medical Group Story. Published April 2019. Accessed December 15, 2020 at: www.mhalink.org/MHADocs/Resources/2019/19-04-22PR_Changing_EHR_PhysBurnout_0119_FINAL.pdf
-
37
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
Reducing burden | CMS. Accessed January 28, 2021 at: https://www.cms.gov/About-CMS/Components/CPI/Reducing-Burden