Burnout, Professional Clinical Trial
Official title:
Creating Healthy Workplaces: Improving Outcomes for Providers and Patients
The health of the public depends upon smoothly functioning physician offices that promote the health of both workers and their patients. This study targets ambulatory health care offices with rapid paced, chaotic environments. Investigators will measure adverse outcomes for providers and staff (e.g., stress and burnout), the impact these have on quality of care for hypertensive, diabetic and depressed patients, and identify areas where practice redesign to create "healthy workplaces" improves these outcomes.
The context in which primary care is delivered is rarely evaluated as part of quality
improvement initiatives or research projects. Data from the MEMO Study (Minimizing Error,
Maximizing Outcome) confirm a relationship between the work environment, provider reactions,
and patient care. Time pressure is associated with physician satisfaction, stress, burnout,
and intent to leave as well as lower quality care for hypertensive patients. Lack of values
alignment between physicians and leaders is associated with physician satisfaction, stress,
burnout, and intent to leave as well as poorer diabetes care and fewer prevention
activities. Thus, providers are not the only ones at risk in adverse work conditions. An
important coexisting factor is the impending primary care physician shortage. Less than
optimal work conditions are associated with physician intent to leave and with reduced
medical student interest in primary care. This randomized study assessed the impact of
applying a novel quality improvement strategy designed to create "healthy workplaces".
The investigators hypothesized that addressing adverse primary care work conditions
(workflow, work control, organizational culture) would lead to greater clinician
participation in programs to improve health care delivery. As part of MEMO, the
investigators developed the Office and Work Life (OWL) measurement tool. The OWL assesses
the primary care workplace and identifies specific working conditions that impact provider
outcomes and quality of care. The current proposal assessed the ability of the OWL and a
focused QI process to facilitate changes in the work environment and improve outcomes for
providers and patients.
Thirty-four primary care clinics were recruited in New York City and the upper Midwest.
Physicians, physician assistants, and nurse practitioners (n=165) were surveyed to collect
OWL data on provider outcomes, and organizational structure and culture. Managers were asked
to provide information on clinic structure, policies and procedures. Eight patients per
provider (n=1131) with hypertension and /or diabetes will be surveyed on health literacy,
quality of life, medication compliance, satisfaction, and trust. Patient charts were audited
to assess hypertension and diabetes management. The data was then compiled into an OWL
measure for each clinic.
34 clinics were randomized. Local leaders, providers, and staff in 17 intervention clinics
received their OWL measure and discussed the successes and challenges to care illustrated by
the data. Assisted by the study team, they developed QI plans focusing on workplace
variables that investigators found contributed to care quality: time pressure, work control,
work pace (chaos), and organizational culture. Twelve months later (Aug. 2012 - Jan. 2013),
OWL data was recollected in all 34 clinics and compared.
New OWL data was fed back to personnel in the 17 intervention clinics to formalize its role
in continuous QI processes. Control clinics received their OWL data at study end. Subsets of
data were analyzed to determine the best ways to modify the work environment to improve
outcomes for underrepresented groups (women and minority providers and minority patients).
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Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Subject), Primary Purpose: Health Services Research
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