Efficiency Clinical Trial
Official title:
Efficiency of Task Switching and Multi-tasking: Observations of Pediatric Resident Behaviors When Managing Interruptions to Daily Workflow
This study will collect observational data on how well pediatric residents handle interruptions to their daily workflow. Residents will be directly observed during their work day and behaviors will be recorded using an electronic tool that will time-stamp their actions when faced with an interruption. The average time it takes for them to return to their original task(s) after faced with an interruption will be calculated, along with correlations made between their predicted multi-tasking ability, year of training, and additional factors.
Efficiency of Task Switching and Multi-tasking: Observations of Pediatric Resident Behaviors
when Managing Interruptions to Daily Workflow
Jennifer R. Di Rocco, DO, Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, JABSOM; Associate Program
Director, UH Pediatric Residency Program; Master of Education Candidate, University of
Cincinnati/Cincinnati Children's Hospital
Summary of Project Concept:
The daily practice of medicine is fraught with frequent interruptions that a busy clinician
must manage appropriately in order to ensure the best patient care possible. Tasks that are
urgent and time-sensitive must be prioritized, organized, and balanced with numerous other
tasks requiring completion during the day. Physicians must also maintain the necessary
flexibility required to adapt to unexpected events that inevitably surface regularly during a
busy clinical workday. The ability to expertly manage interruptions may be considered under
the umbrella of the "art of medicine," which is not found in textbooks and can be difficult
to teach. Additional challenges in this era of limited duty hours include limited patient
exposure with less time to develop the skills for effective management of interruptions. Some
young clinicians seem to easily triage tasks as they are presented, while others struggle
with this role.
Pediatric residents have graded autonomy as they progress through a program, with a steep
learning curve in their first year. From an initial dependence on the senior resident and
faculty when starting as a new intern to improved ability to independently practice as they
near the start of their second year, each intern matures both clinically and professionally
at various rates. The Accreditation Council of Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) has
assigned 21 pediatric milestones that must be reported back to them twice yearly with a
resident's progress along the continuum. Milestones describing the degree of medical
knowledge, trustworthiness, leadership, teamwork and stress management skills are all
required and applicable to the topic of one's ability to manage interruptions appropriately.
The description of the "Patient Care 2" milestone, which reads "Organize and prioritize
responsibilities to provide patient care that is safe, effective and efficient" addresses the
concept of the "optimization of multitasking" in the milestone discussion. This is described
as a higher level of clinical achievement in which a physician demonstrates concurrent task
completion in a manner ends to a more efficient workflow without compromising patient safety.
The complex set of behaviors described by this milestone can be best observed and assessed
when a resident has increased responsibility and leadership roles including supervising a
team, managing pager calls and admitting new patients simultaneously. Some residents in our
program in recent years have struggled in supervisory roles, specifically with this
milestone, but some have excelled, despite having less practice than prior decades of
trainees. Understanding the factors contributing to how pediatric residents manage
interruptions (from "novice" interns to "expert" third year residents) should be helpful
towards designing curricula for mastery of these skills in our program and in others across
the nation.
Many factors are involved in how physicians manage interruptions, and the positive or
negative effects of their management decisions have implications on patient safety and
medical errors in the clinical workplace. Observational studies of pediatric residents do not
exist in the current literature, nor does a study exist that correlates physicians' ability
and quality of interruption management with their overall wellness including their preferred
learning styles, aptitudes in dealing with interruptions, sleep debt, and mental strain.
Garnering such data and analyzing such variables could provide added guidance and
understanding to those residency programs that are struggling to help learners improve in
this arena, which is difficult to truly assess until a resident is in a supervisory position
with multifactorial responsibilities. If there were a way of predicting aptitude in this
skill set early, learners who may not easily manage interruptions could be targeted and
practice exercises designed to strengthen this skill set. With this intervention, the
transition from an intern to a senior supervising resident may be much smoother. The first
step towards creating tools for augmenting performance in the area of managing interruptions
gracefully and efficiently is to understand the current factors that are involved in a
resident's decision process when faced with interruptions during the daily workflow. An
observational study of residents in real time would provide such data and serve as a
springboard for future work in creating tools and curricula to assist residents struggling
with task management.
Project methods will include IRB approval and recruitment of pediatric residents.
Participants will be asked to complete some baseline surveys (which include wellness and
sleep inventories) and a multitasking exercise (called the Multitasking Assessment Tool or
MTAT). Residents will then be observed multiple times over 1-2 hour time slots when rotating
in both the general pediatric wards and emergency department settings by the study leader or
by a trained observer, with all behaviors categorized and recorded with time stamps via a
portable electronic database time-motion tool. On the day of observation, each participant
will complete two short surveys regarding the degree of stress they are feeling that day as
well as a log of their previous week's sleep habits.
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