Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04004806 |
Other study ID # |
18-782 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
September 2, 2019 |
Est. completion date |
November 30, 2020 |
Study information
Verified date |
January 2021 |
Source |
The Cleveland Clinic |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
A prospective cohort study aimed to determine the impact of increased physician patient
interaction on physician well being and patient satisfaction. It involves recording time
spent by physicians at the patient's bedside using tracking devices and providing feedback
emails encouraging them to spend more time. The data will be analyzed to see if bedside time
correlates with patient satisfaction scores.
The study has 3 phases - 1. Observational phase for 3 months: Only involves recording
baseline physician bedside time using tracking devices. 2. Interventional phase for 6 months
involves generating percentile scores for physician bedside time and providing feedback
through emails and texts. 3. Post intervention phase for 3 months to evaluate the impact of
intervention on daily practice of physicians.
Description:
All residents and staff members who do not opt out of the study by July 1, 2019 will be
included as the final study population. The planned duration of the study is 12 months
starting from July 2019 - June 2020. The total time period will be further divided into three
phases.
Phase 1 (Observational phase): All residents and staff physicians rotating through the
inpatient medicine services during the initial 3 months who agreed to be a part of the study
will be provided with Hill Rom tracking devices to quantify the time spent at the patient's
bedside by each member as part of the daily practice.
Phase 2 (Intervention phase): Following the initial observational phase, the interventional
phase will be 6 months in duration . During this period, the recorded time spent by the
individual study participants at the patient's bedside will be compared to their respective
peers (e.g. intern to intern, senior resident to senior resident and staff physician to staff
physician), and percentile scores will be generated. Time spent by each member of each team
at the patient's bedside will be abstracted from the tracking software daily and added on a
weekly basis to generate cumulative values by the research coordinator. Patients not assigned
to a particular team member will not count towards the denominator. Data will be collected
individually for the staff physician, senior resident and intern in each team and compared to
peer members in the other teams and converted to percentiles. Based on these percentile
scores, the study participants will receive emails and text pages notifying them of the
results. The participants whose scores fall in the lower 50th percentile, will be encouraged
to increase patient interaction times to reach a target of at least 50th percentile. Striving
to stay in the top 50th percentile will provide continuous reinforcement. The participants
with scores in the top 50th percentile will receive congratulatory emails to encourage them
to keep up the performance. In case of scheduling changes or absences, team members can
notify the study coordinator to exclude their data for the said number of days. The
percentile scores will be used solely for the purpose of this study and will neither impact
trainee evaluation nor their learning objectives for the rotation. Similarly for staff
physicians, the scores generated will not be a part of their annual performance reviews.
Phase 3: (Post Intervention observation phase): The final phase of the study will be 3
months. The intervention of feedback emails and text pages will be discontinued and the study
participants will only be monitored to see if the past intervention made an impact on their
daily clinical practice in terms of time spent with the patients.
At the end of the rotation the study participants will be assessed for their well-being and
burnout by surveying them using the standard, validated, IRB-approved, anonymous
questionnaires provided by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME),
during each of the above phases