Keywords

Documentation, electronic health record, nurse practitioners, physician assistants

 

Authors

  1. Watson, Michael D. MD (Surgical Resident)

ABSTRACT

Background: Studies demonstrate significant electronic health record (EHR) use by junior residents; however, few studies have investigated this for nurse practitioners and physician assistants (NPs/PAs).

 

Purpose: The aim of this study was to quantify the time spent on the EHR by NPs/PAs and junior residents.

 

Methods: Electronic health record usage data were collected from April 2015 through April 2016. Monthly EHR usage was compared between NPs/PAs and postgraduate second and third year residents. Further subgroup analysis of NPs/PAs and residents from surgical or nonsurgical fields was conducted.

 

Results: Data for 22 NPs/PAs (16 surgical and six nonsurgical) and 125 residents (31 surgical and 94 nonsurgical) were analyzed. Nurse practitioners/physician assistants opened fewer charts per day (4.9 +/- 1.5 vs. 5.4 +/- 3.1), placed more orders per month, and spent more daily time on the EHR (176.5 +/- 51.7 minutes vs. 152.3 +/- 71.9 minutes; p < .0001). Compared with residents, NPs/PAs spent more time per patient in all categories (chart review, documentation, order entry) and in total time per patient chart (all p < .05). Comparing surgical NPs/PAs to surgical residents, findings were similar with fewer charts per day, more total daily EHR time, and more EHR time per patient in every tracked category (all p < .05).

 

Implications for practice: This is the first study to quantify time on the EHR for NPs/PAs. Nurse practitioners/physician assistants spent more time on the EHR than residents, and this is accentuated with surgical NPs/PAs. Electronic health record utilization appears more burdensome for NPs/PAs; however, the reason for this is unclear and highlights the need for targeted interventions.