References Methods Introduction Results Dicussion The Effect of Resident Physicians on Press Ganey Scores in the Emergency Department The patient’s experience.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Telephone Triage Acute Calls Presented by The General Medicine Team Loyola Outpatient Center.
Advertisements

Acknowledgements RHH ED staff Safety and Quality Unit RHH for their participation and valuable contribution Next Steps It is envisaged over the next 12.
Improving ED Bedside Teaching & Resident Evaluation Stanford EM Faculty Development May 21 st, 2003.
South Carolina Department of Mental Health (DMH) Division of Medical Affairs Telepsychiatry Consultation Program Achieving Tomorrow, Today Last Update:
Emergency Department Thoracotomy: A Hybrid Simulation With A Clinical Outcome.
Thrush in the Breastfeeding Dyad Authors: Tasnim Khalife, MD Department of Family and Community Medicine Healthy Families in Healthy Communities Introduction.
METHODS Measuring the Efficacy of Introductory Pamphlets on Patient Satisfaction Lisa Brown 1, Ayesha Murtuza 1, Adil Akhtar 1, Carol Stanford 1,2, Jennifer.
Edward P. Sloan, MD, MPH ACEP Clinical Policy Clinical Policy: Critical Issues in the Management of Adult Patients Presenting to the Emergency Department.
Conducting a Sample Analysis Impact of Discharge Phone Calls on Patient Satisfaction.
ETIM-1 CSE 5810 CSE5810: Intro to Biomedical Informatics Mobile Computing to Impact Patient Health and Data Exchange and Statistical Analysis Presenter:
DMC Customer Service DMC Customer Service Department
Improving Access to Information during Rounds through Librarian Support Lisa Olsen Kilburn Information Resources Specialist Southern Regional AHEC October.
Emergency Ultrasound Proposal. Emergency Ultrasound In common use since early 1990’s In common use since early 1990’s First curriculum was published in.
Acute Ischemic Stroke Management: 2004 Emergency Medicine Perspectives.
® Introduction Mental Health Predictors of Pain and Function in Patients with Chronic Low Back Pain Olivia D. Lara, K. Ashok Kumar MD FRCS Sandra Burge,
IMPLEMENTING AN EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT SCRIBE PROGRAM AT ALASKA REGIONAL HOSPITAL A Feasibility Study.
Patient Experience/ Satisfaction What’s at Stake ?
Implementing Team Training at Duke Karen Frush, BSN, MD Chief Patient Safety Officer Duke Medicine.
A Comparison April 7 th, 2011 Project Review. 1. Identify differences in patient demographics 2. Compare patient satisfaction results 3. Compare hospital.
The authors would like to acknowledge the nursing staff that participated at all three locations. Without their support, many things would not be possible.
PATIENT SATISFACTION AND WHY IT MATTERS. Why It Matters  CMS (Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services), hospitals and insurance providers are using.
HCAHPS Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems.
Pullman Regional Hospital June 30, 2010 Culture Trumps Strategy The Impact of Leadership on Patient Safety.
Copyright restrictions may apply JAMA Pediatrics Journal Club Slides: National Assessment of ED Pediatric Readiness Gausche-Hill M, Ely M, Schmuhl P, et.
POINT OF SERVICE COLLECTIONS OUR JOURNEY Scripps Memorial Hospital Encinitas May 4, 2015 Bessie Bennett, Access Manager - SMHE.
A COMPREHENSIVE APPROACH TO DELIRIUM ELLEN BARRINGTON, MSN, RN, BC.
1 Copyright © 2011, 2007, 2003, 1999 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. The Medical Assisting Profession Chapter 3.
Redesigning Care in the Paediatric Emergency Department CYWHS, SA Presented by Ms Heather Gray Chief Executive : CYWHS 25 th November 2005.
EFFECTS OF RESIDENTS ON EFFICIENCY IN AN EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT J. Silberholz, D. Anderson, E. Sze, J. Lim, E. Taneja, E. Tao, B. Kubic, K. Johnson, D. Kalowitz,
EFFECTS OF RESIDENTS ON EFFICIENCY IN AN EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT J. Silberholz, D. Anderson, M. Harrington, Dr. Jon Mark Hirshon, Dr. Bruce Golden 1.
Learn and Serve Patient Education and Medical Education in Primary Practice General Pediatrics The University of Chicago Yingshan Shi, MD.
Assessment of Emergency Medicine Residents’ Bedside Communication Skills: A Survey of Emergency Department Patients Amanda Keller York College of PA Biology.
Establishing Service Culture At SGMC Randy Sauls, COO.
Disclosure of Financial Conflicts of Interest in Continuing Medical Education Michael D. Jibson, MD, PhD and Jennifer Seibert, MD University of Michigan.
Cleveland Clinic Science Internship Program How Fast Are We? Throughput Times for Admissions from the Emergency Department Brian Hom; Deborah Porter RN,
Interpersonal Skills 4 detailed studies Health Psychology.
Service Excellence Suburban Hospital Physician Orientation Johns Hopkins Medicine
Building a Healthier Prince George’s County PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT HEALTH ENTERPRISE ZONE Pamela B. Creekmur Health Officer Dr. Ernest.
St. Francis Health Center Emergency Dept. 2 Emergency Department  24 hour ED -22 bed capacity  Occupational Medicine/Fast Track -8 bed capacity -Occupational.
Changing Our Culture.
Physicians in TQM: A Survey in Taiwan Fenghueih Huarng Department of Business Adm,Southern Taiwan Univ. of Technology Huei-min Hsei Center for Hospital.
NMC Online Conference December 2005 Assessing Learning in a MORPG Patricia Youngblood, PhD Director of Evaluation, SUMMIT (Stanford University Medical.
MEDICAL STUDENT TRANSITION COURSE Professionalism in the Clinical Environment ANTHONY A. MEYER, MD, PHD CHAIRMAN, DEPARTMENT OF SURGERY UNIVERSITY OF NORTH.
Impact of: a specialist wound clinic on patients who develop complex wounds post cardiac surgery Presented by: Penny Gowland ANP Pascaline Njoki Thanks.
AHRQ Safety Program for Long-Term Care: HAIs/CAUTI Data Collection Training, Part II Nursing Home Survey on Patient Safety Culture Onboarding #3 for All.
Management of Common Post-Operative Emergencies Are July Interns Ready for Prime Time? Jocelyn Logan-Collins, Stephen Barnes, Karen Huezo, Timothy Pritts.
 Retention  Liability.  Studies show that students receiving counseling services are more likely to stay in school than students who don’t receive.
Simulated Patients Improve Medical Student Comfort Level with Breaking Bad News and End of Life Issues Skotti Church, MD Carl J Fichtenbaum, MD, FACP University.
Copyright restrictions may apply JAMA Ophthalmology Journal Club Slides: Awareness and Knowledge of Emergent Ophthalmic Disease Uhr JH, Mishra K, Wei C,
March 9, 2015 Best Practice Themes Franklin County Task Force on the Psychiatric and Emergency System (PCES)
 Friends and Family Test (FFT) -single question ‘would you recommend…’  The Adult National Inpatient Survey (AIPS) - AIPS uses validated questions based.
CAPE ROAD SURGERY Patient Questionnaire 2013 / 2014.
TEMPLATE AND PRINTING BY: GRMERC Consortium Members: Grand Valley State University, Michigan State University, Saint Mary’s.
A Longitudinal Curriculum in Motivational Interviewing WT-04 Clara Keegan, MD University of Vermont Medical Center.
“STAR (Safe Transitions Across CaRe): A resident and faculty initiative to improve patient care across the healthcare continuum Nancy M. Denizard-Thompson,
Emergency Medicine Competency Assessment of Patient Satisfaction (EMCAPS) Worley E, Shankar M, Perry K, Straff D, Sperling J, Carter W, Tanouye R New York.
Background The occurrence of bedside teaching rounds has declined over the decades, with various barriers. One barrier sited is patient discomfort with.
Procedure Logging - What's old is new again Theodore Gaeta, DO, MPH Michael Cabezon, MD Annette Visconti, MD New York Methodist Hospital Introduction METHODS.
Khaldoon AlKhaldi, MD Disaster medicine / Pre-Hospital care & International EMS Fellow BIDMC Harvard Medical schoo l Evolution of research production of.
Pharmacist Impact on Patient Mortality and Advanced Cardiac Life Support Guideline Compliance During In-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Joseph Cavanaugh, PharmD.
Teaching Cross-Cultural Communication Skills Online – A Mixed Method Evaluation of a Novel Curricular Element Amy L. Lee, MD Tufts University School of.
Emergency Department Admission Refusals Requiring Readmission at an Academic Medical Center David R. Kumar MD, Adam E. Nevel MD/MBA, John P. Riordan MD.
Learning to Become a Family Physician - The First Six Months
Telepsychiatry Consultation Program Achieving Tomorrow, Today
Family Practice Residents’ Use of Clear Communication Skills
PIMC Patient Experience Update January-June 2016
CLICK TO GO BACK TO KIOSK MENU
CLICK TO GO BACK TO KIOSK MENU
Experience Introducing Physician Assistant Students
Christopher S. Kiefer MD, Erica B. Shaver MD,
Presentation transcript:

References Methods Introduction Results Dicussion The Effect of Resident Physicians on Press Ganey Scores in the Emergency Department The patient’s experience of the medical care they receive and their satisfaction with that experience are increasingly tied to both hospital reimbursement and to individual physician compensation. Patient satisfaction measures such as the Press-Ganey survey are used to evaluate the hospital and staff that care for a patient during their hospitalization and ACEP recognizes the significance of these new measures. 1 In recent years, several studies have assessed the impact of residents on Press-Ganey scores. Inpatient hospitalist teams with residents were found to either improve or have no effect on patient satisfaction scores. 2,3 Hospitals in general and emergency departments specifically are paying more attention to the feedback that patients provide, but there is a paucity of literature on the impact that residents have on their satisfaction. To our knowledge, there has been no published literature comparing patient satisfaction scores among residents and attendings in the emergency department. We look here at the effect that residents have on patient satisfaction in a busy community emergency department where patients are evaluated by either an attending alone or an attending physician and a resident. The survey items that we reviewed include evaluation of wait time, physician courtesy, physician concern for the patient’s comfort, timely update of results and perceived physician communication skills. The patients treated by an attending with a resident tended give their physician interaction a higher score; however, the difference was not significant for any single item. Our setting is a community emergency department with a level II trauma designation that sees 115,000 patients a year and recently established a three year emergency medicine residency. Residents complete structured training on patient satisfaction as part of their residency orientation. Press Ganey survey answers that relate to the patient-physician interaction were tabulated for the first three quarters of A total of 816 surveys were returned in this time period. Patient encounters were divided into two categories, evaluation by attending only and attending with resident. Patients seen by advanced practioners were excluded. A mixed regression analysis was performed on individual questions to compare the two groups. Table 1 Comparison of Press Ganey Scores for Attendings and Attendings with Residents The patient’s experience of the medical care they receive and their satisfaction with that experience are increasingly tied to both hospital reimbursement and to individual physician compensation. Resident training will necessarily impact these relationships; while having residents participate in the care of patients can add to the length and complexity of each interaction, patients evaluated by emergency medicine residents does not appear to reduce the overall patient experience. 1. Patient Satisfaction. American College of Emergency Physicians website. Published June Accessed November 1, Iannuzzi MC, Iannuzzi JC, Holtsbery A, Wright SM, Knohl SJ. Comparing hospitalist-resident to hospitalist-midlevel practioner team performance on length of stay and direct patient care cost. Journal of Graduate Medical Education. 2015; 7(1): Bastani A, Shagiri B, Palomba K, Bananno D, Anderson W. An ED scribe program is able to improve throughput time and patient satisfaction. American Journal of Emergency Medicine. 2014; 32(5): Sayegh,Rockan MD; Berns, Alyssa DO; Finefrock, Douglas DO; Feldman, Joseph MD, FACEP Department of Emergency Medicine, Hackensack University Medical Center, Hackensack, New Jersey Survey ItemAttendings Only (N=501) Attendings with Residents (N=166) P-Value Overall Question Average (4.00)80.43 (4.00) Waiting time in the treatment area, before being seen by a doctor (1.54)64.47 (2.76) Courtesy of the doctor85.19 (1.02)86.88 (1.78) Doctor’s concern for your comfort while treating you (1.20)82.70 (2.08) Doctor’s concern to keep you informed about your treatment (1.20)83.28 (2.09) Degree to which the doctor took time to listen to you (1.12)84.82 (1.93) Disclosures No authors have any conflicts to declare