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- Aug 21, 2007
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I can be wrong in my line of thinking, but recently I've been concluding that using a scribe actually slows me down.
1. I enter room with scribe. Most of the time, they have a workstation on wheels and they stand there with the charting program (Cerner) open on one half of the screen, and (of all things) Notepad open on the other. They make notes on the notepad, and try to synthesize a HPI after the initial encounter.
Criticism: Over half of the time, I end up deleting their entire HPI and dictating it myself using DragonSpeak. Their HPI often lacks duration, direction, or some other quality that makes it difficult to understand just what is going on with the patient. This becomes even more time-consuming with the histrionics and the "pan-positive" ROS patients.
2. For physical exam findings, I have tried stating what I want out loud to the scribe when in the room. I don't understand why they do this, but most of the time they put a shorthand version of what I dictate in NOTEPAD, and then try and expand that into the PE section later on. The scribes lack the vocabulary and medical knowledge to do this reliably. For example. I will state aloud:
"Focused physical exam of the left lower extremity reveals no obvious deformity or fracture. Most importantly, the entire limb is pink, warm, and well-perfused - and the limb is without any threat to its neurovascular integrity. There is modest tenderness and fullness to the popliteal fossa, most clinically consistent with a Baker's cyst. There are no markings or discolorations to suggest underlying vascular pathology such as DVT or PVD."
Instead, this is actually what I got last night: "FOCUS EXAM: No FX. Entire limb is pink and profuse with no threat to NV exam Bakers cyst no marks or color for vasculapathy."
Criticism: I have tried on no fewer than twenty occasions (without exaggeration) to say directly to the scribes: "Listen, I just want you to be a microphone. I say it. You type it ... capital letters, periods, full sentences and all." I spoke my punctuation aloud to them in the exam room. They still go through their "Notepad -> Cerner" workflow. Then, I have to re-do it myself. DragonSpeak gets it right the first time, all the time. With autotexts and macros, my job is even easier. I type "GE", and I get my "This extremity is safe and stable" speech.
3. I have been told to use the scribes to help with workflow by asking them to remind me when "X" radiology study has returned, or when "Y" labs are back. With a ratio of 1 scribe to 2 or 3 providers... the scribe is more often off in another exam room rather than paying attention to the tracking board. This leaves me just doing it by myself anyways.
I can be wrong. I would love to find a good use for the scribes, but I'm really trending in the other direction now.
1. I enter room with scribe. Most of the time, they have a workstation on wheels and they stand there with the charting program (Cerner) open on one half of the screen, and (of all things) Notepad open on the other. They make notes on the notepad, and try to synthesize a HPI after the initial encounter.
Criticism: Over half of the time, I end up deleting their entire HPI and dictating it myself using DragonSpeak. Their HPI often lacks duration, direction, or some other quality that makes it difficult to understand just what is going on with the patient. This becomes even more time-consuming with the histrionics and the "pan-positive" ROS patients.
2. For physical exam findings, I have tried stating what I want out loud to the scribe when in the room. I don't understand why they do this, but most of the time they put a shorthand version of what I dictate in NOTEPAD, and then try and expand that into the PE section later on. The scribes lack the vocabulary and medical knowledge to do this reliably. For example. I will state aloud:
"Focused physical exam of the left lower extremity reveals no obvious deformity or fracture. Most importantly, the entire limb is pink, warm, and well-perfused - and the limb is without any threat to its neurovascular integrity. There is modest tenderness and fullness to the popliteal fossa, most clinically consistent with a Baker's cyst. There are no markings or discolorations to suggest underlying vascular pathology such as DVT or PVD."
Instead, this is actually what I got last night: "FOCUS EXAM: No FX. Entire limb is pink and profuse with no threat to NV exam Bakers cyst no marks or color for vasculapathy."
Criticism: I have tried on no fewer than twenty occasions (without exaggeration) to say directly to the scribes: "Listen, I just want you to be a microphone. I say it. You type it ... capital letters, periods, full sentences and all." I spoke my punctuation aloud to them in the exam room. They still go through their "Notepad -> Cerner" workflow. Then, I have to re-do it myself. DragonSpeak gets it right the first time, all the time. With autotexts and macros, my job is even easier. I type "GE", and I get my "This extremity is safe and stable" speech.
3. I have been told to use the scribes to help with workflow by asking them to remind me when "X" radiology study has returned, or when "Y" labs are back. With a ratio of 1 scribe to 2 or 3 providers... the scribe is more often off in another exam room rather than paying attention to the tracking board. This leaves me just doing it by myself anyways.
I can be wrong. I would love to find a good use for the scribes, but I'm really trending in the other direction now.