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Patients or Technology: Where Do Nurses Spend More Time?


Patients or Technology: Where Do Nurses Spend More Time?

A new study incorporates patient experience to analyze nursing activity

Would it surprise you to hear that nurses spend twice as much time interacting with technology than they do interacting directly with patients?

Probably not. 

Nurses are the ones who should know. But sometimes, even nurses can underestimate or overestimate how much time they spend on certain activities. 

A new study at the University of Pittsburgh Medical center (UPMC) set out to investigate complaints from nurses that they were spending too much time in documentation. Investigators coupled patient surveys with observations, nurses’ self-reports and electronic health record (EHR) data to better understand how nurses allocate their time during a shift.

The findings, recently published online in the Journal of Nursing Care Quality, are intended to help the health system take further steps to improve care quality and the patient experience.

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“UPMC nurses had expressed concerns that they were spending too much time entering information into the EHR and not enough time at the bedside caring for patients,” said Linda Higgins, PhD, RN, lead author of the project. “It also was unclear how patients felt about the time they spent with their nurses, so we designed this project to gather multi-faceted data that could provide a comprehensive picture of nursing activity and guide future improvements in workflow and patient satisfaction.”

Over five months, 11 trained observers visited four inpatient units, shadowing one shift for each of the 79 nurses involved in the project. The observers chronicled 900 hours of nursing activity and logged it according to predetermined categories. Following the observed shift, nurses filled out a questionnaire, and the observers interviewed the patients cared for by the observed nurses.

In the interviews, patients reported spending an average of 74 minutes with their assigned nurse, and 90 percent rated the amount of time with their nurse as “excellent” or “good.” Yet, the observers estimate that the nurses actually spent only about 40 minutes with each patient. This suggests that the quality of the time that nurses spend with their patients may impact the patients’ perceptions of the length of time their nurses spend with them.

The most frequently observed shift activities were: documenting in (11.5 percent) and reviewing (9.1 percent) the EHR; patient assessment and interaction (8.9 percent); in-person communications with health care workers about patients or patient care (7.5 percent); and patient care and bedside procedures (7.2 percent). Overall, nurses were observed to spend an average of 33 percent of their shift interacting with technology.

Other project findings indicate that nurses overestimated the time they spent directly caring for patients and charting in the EHR compared to observations. Nurses also reported mostly positive attitudes toward the EHR and other technology in terms of user experience.

“This project uncovered a discord between nurses’ self-reported and direct observations of how time is actually spent during a shift,” said Tami Minnier, UPMC’s chief quality officer. “With these findings in mind, we can better target changes that may improve the way our nurses work, while also boosting patient satisfaction and outcomes.”

Source: UPMC.

Did you know? Travel nurses can often spend more time with patients than staff, since they are not involved with committees and in-house administrative activities. Design your ideal travel nursing job or apply today to get connected with top recruiters.



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