How Much Time are Physicians and Nurses Spending Together at the Patient Bedside?
BACKGROUND: Bedside rounding involving both nurses and physicians has numerous benefits for patients and staff. However, precise quantitative data on the current extent of physician–nurse (MD–RN) overlap at the patient bedside are lacking.
OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to examine the frequency of nurse and physician overlap at the patient beside and what factors affect this frequency.
DESIGN: This is a prospective, observational study of time-motion data generated from wearable radio frequency identification (RFID)-based locator technology.
SETTING: Single-institution academic hospital.
MEASUREMENTS: The length of physician rounds, frequency of rounds that include nurses simultaneously at the bedside, and length of MD–RN overlap were measured and analyzed by ward, day of week, and distance between patient room and nursing station.
RESULTS: A total of 739 MD rounding events were captured over 90 consecutive days. Of these events, 267 took place in single-bed patient rooms. The frequency of MD–RN overlap was 30.0%, and there was no statistical difference between the three wards studied. Overall, the average length of all MD rounds was 7.31 ± 0.58 minutes, but rounding involving a bedside nurse lasted longer than rounds with MDs alone (9.56 vs 5.68 minutes, P < .05). There was no difference in either the length of rounds or the frequency of MD–RN overlap between weekdays and weekends. Finally, patient rooms located farther away from the nursing station had a lower likelihood of MD–RN overlap (Pearson’s r = –0.67, P < .05).
CONCLUSION: RFID-based technology provides precise, automated, and high-throughput time-motion data to capture nurse and physician activity. At our institution, 30.0% of rounds involve a bedside nurse, highlighting a potential barrier to bedside interdisciplinary rounding.
© 2019 Society of Hospital Medicine
Study Design and Data Collection
Data were collected on the three wards for 90 consecutive days, including nights and weekends. As physicians and nurses moved throughout the ward to conduct their usual patient care activities, the temporal-spatial data associated with their unique RFIDs were automatically collected in real time by the Hill-Rom receivers built into each patient room. Every day, a spreadsheet detailing the activity of all participating nurses and physicians for the past 24 hours was generated for the investigators.
A rounding event was defined as any episode in which a physician was in a patient room for more than 10 seconds. Incidences in which a physician entered and left a room multiple times over a short time span (with less than five minutes in between each event) were classified as a single rounding event. A physician and a nurse were defined as having overlapped if their RFID data showed that they were in the same patient room for a minimum of 10 seconds at the same time. For the purposes of this study, data generated from other RFID-wearing professionals, such as nursing assistants or unit secretaries, as well as data collected from the hallways, were excluded.
Statistical Analysis
All statistical analyses were conducted using GraphPad Prism (GraphPad Software, San Diego, California). Rounding and overlap lengths were rounded to the nearest minute (minimum one minute). Mean lengths are expressed along with the standard error. Comparisons of the average lengths of MD rounding events between wards was conducted using two-tailed Student t-test or one-way ANOVA. Comparisons of the frequency of MD–RN overlap between wards and across different days of the week were performed using a Chi-squared test. The analysis of correlation between the frequency of MD–RN overlap and distance between patient room and nursing station was conducted by calculating Pearson’s correlation. A P value of less than .05 was considered statistically significant.
RESULTS
Baseline Rounding Characteristics
Over the study period of 90 consecutive days, 739 MD rounding events were captured, for an average of 8.2 events per day. The mean length of all MD rounding events was 7.31 minutes (±0.27, ranging from one to 70 minutes). Of these 739 MD rounding events, we separately examined the 267 events that took place in single-bed patient rooms, to control for false-positive physician and nurse interactions (for example, if the MD and RN were caring for two separate roommates). The average rounding length of single-bed rooms was 6.93 (±0.27) minutes (Figure 1). For the three individual wards, the average rounding lengths were 6.40 ± 0.73, 7.48 ± 0.94, and 7.02 ± 0.54 minutes, respectively (no statistically significant difference).
Frequency of MD–RN Overlap
Of the 267 MD rounding events observed in single-bed rooms, a nurse was present in the room for 80 events (30.0%). The frequencies of MD–RN overlap in patient rooms were 37.0% (30/81), 28.0% (14/50), and 26.5% (36/136) for the three individual wards (P > .05), respectively.
The durations of MD–RN overlap, when these events did occur, were 3.43 ± 0.38, 3.00 ± 0.70, and 3.69 ± 0.92 minutes, respectively (P > .05). The overall mean length of MD–RN overlap for all single rooms was 3.48 ± 0.45 minutes.