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Doctor Who? A Quality Improvement Project to Assess and Improve Patients' Knowledge of Their Inpatient Physicians.

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1.1 Mb
Date
2016-05
Authors
Broderick-Forsgren, Kathleen
Hunter, Wynn G
Schulteis, Ryan D
Liu, Wen-Wei
Boggan, Joel C
Sharma, Poonam
Thomas, Steven
Zaas, Aimee
Bae, Jonathan
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(9 total)
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Abstract
Background Patient-physician communication is an integral part of high-quality patient care and an expectation of the Clinical Learning Environment Review program. Objective This quality improvement initiative evaluated the impact of an educational audit and feedback intervention on the frequency of use of 2 tools-business cards and white boards-to improve provider identification. Methods This before-after study utilized patient surveys to determine the ability of those patients to name and recognize their physicians. The before phase began in July 2013. From September 2013 to May 2014, physicians received education on business card and white board use. Results We surveyed 378 patients. Our intervention improved white board utilization (72.2% postintervention versus 54.5% preintervention, P < .01) and slightly improved business card use (44.4% versus 33.7%, P = .07), but did not improve physician recognition. Only 20.3% (14 of 69) of patients could name their physician without use of the business card or white board. Data from all study phases showed the use of both tools improved patients' ability to name physicians (OR = 1.72 and OR = 2.12, respectively; OR = 3.68 for both; P < .05 for all), but had no effect on photograph recognition. Conclusions Our educational intervention improved white board use, but did not result in improved patient ability to recognize physicians. Pooled data of business cards and white boards, alone or combined, improved name recognition, suggesting better use of these tools may increase identification. Future initiatives should target other barriers to usage of these types of tools.
Type
Journal article
Subject
Humans
Photography
Physician-Patient Relations
Hospitalists
Internship and Residency
Adult
Physicians
Inpatients
Quality Improvement
Surveys and Questionnaires
Permalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/19780
Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.4300/JGME-D-15-00067.1
Publication Info
Broderick-Forsgren, Kathleen; Hunter, Wynn G; Schulteis, Ryan D; Liu, Wen-Wei; Boggan, Joel C; Sharma, Poonam; ... Bae, Jonathan (2016). Doctor Who? A Quality Improvement Project to Assess and Improve Patients' Knowledge of Their Inpatient Physicians. Journal of Graduate Medical Education, 8(2). pp. 197-201. 10.4300/JGME-D-15-00067.1. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/19780.
This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Scholars@Duke

Bae

Jonathan Gregory Bae

Associate Professor of Medicine
Patient safety and quality improvement, hospital based performance improvement, care transitions and hospital readmissions, general internal medicine hospital care, resident and medical student education.
Boggan

Joel Boggan

Associate Professor of Medicine
I am a hospital medicine physician interested in quality improvement, patient safety, and medical education across the UME, GME, and CME environments. My current QI and research projects include work on readmissions, inpatient ORYX and patient experience measures, clinical documentation improvement, medication reconciliation, and appropriate utilization of inpatient resources. Alongside this work, I serve as the lead mentor for our Durham VA Chief Resident in Quality and Safety within the Depart
Hunter

Wynn Hunter

House Staff
My overarching research interest and long-term goal is personalizing care for patients with heart failure. This is a complex, interdisciplinary endeavor requiring advancement in several areas. Presently, my research efforts are focused on the following sub-aims: clarifying mechanisms of heart failure pathogenesis, elucidating clinical and molecular phenotypes, improving risk-stratification, and characterizing physician-patient communication. To accomplish these aims, I use non-invasive metabolom
Schulteis

Ryan D Schulteis

Assistant Professor of Medicine
Sharma

Poonam Sharma

Associate Professor of Medicine
Thomas

Samantha Thomas

Biostatistician, Principal
Samantha is the manager of the Duke Cancer Institute (DCI) Biostatistics Shared Resource. Collaboratively, she primarily works with physicians in DCI, specifically in research of Endocrine Neoplasia and Breast Cancer. She is also the director of the Biostatistics, Epidemiology, Research, and Design Methods (BERD) Core Training and Internship Program (BCTIP). Her professional experience involves study design, analysis, and reporting of clinical trials and observational studies. Her specific areas
Zaas

Aimee Kirsch Zaas

Professor of Medicine
Medical education Genomic applications for diagnosis of infectious diseases Genomic applications for prediction of infectious diseases
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