Can You Hold Please? How Internal Medicine Residents Deal With Patient Telephone Calls

Little is known about the mechanisms used in internal medicine residency programs to handle patient telephone calls. To address this, a survey of internal medicine residents was conducted at 10 different internal medicine residency programs. The response rate was 76% (N=388). Approximately 90% of th...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American journal of the medical sciences 1994-12, Vol.308 (6), p.349-352
Hauptverfasser: Hannis, Mark D., Michael Elnicki, D., Morris, Douglas K., Flannery, Michael T., Telephone Encounters Learning Initiative Group
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container_end_page 352
container_issue 6
container_start_page 349
container_title The American journal of the medical sciences
container_volume 308
creator Hannis, Mark D.
Michael Elnicki, D.
Morris, Douglas K.
Flannery, Michael T.
Telephone Encounters Learning Initiative Group
description Little is known about the mechanisms used in internal medicine residency programs to handle patient telephone calls. To address this, a survey of internal medicine residents was conducted at 10 different internal medicine residency programs. The response rate was 76% (N=388). Approximately 90% of the residents handled patient telephone calls. The residents saw a mean of 7 patients per week in clinic (standard deviation±2) and received an average of 2 patient calls daily (standard deviation±2). The mean number of patient calls received each night on-call was 3 (standard deviation±6) and on weekend call days, an average of 4 patient calls were received (standard deviation±8). Internal medicine residents reported spending an average of 7minutes per call talking to the patient (standard deviation±5) and 8minutes in follow-up activities (standard deviation±6). Residents reported documenting calls less than 35% of the time. Residents disagreed with the statements “I am very satisfied with my patient telephone call system” and “My patients are very satisfied with my telephone call system.” Most internal medicine residents handle a significant amount of patient telephone calls, and the systems for handling these calls are less than satisfactory. The procedures used to manage patient calls and the training for this component of practice should be improved.
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source Journals@Ovid Ovid Autoload; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Biological and medical sciences
Health and social institutions
Health participants
Internal medicine
Medical sciences
Public health. Hygiene
Public health. Hygiene-occupational medicine
Residents
Survey
Systems
Telephone medicine
title Can You Hold Please? How Internal Medicine Residents Deal With Patient Telephone Calls
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