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An Improvement Project in Reducing After-Visit Phone Calls in a Community Pediatric Neurology Clinic: Too Much Communication?
Neurology. Clinical Practice 2024 April
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Physicians strive to provide high-quality clinical care, yet after-visit patient telephone calls create extra demands on a clinician's time. Pediatric neurologists are particularly affected by this challenge given the number of patients with chronic illnesses they serve and the volume of worried parents they support. Added workload coupled with a busy office practice increases the likelihood of early physician burnout, which can have downstream effects on the quality of patient care and patient satisfaction. Using the IHI model for quality improvement (abbreviated QI moving forward), QI methodology was used to determine volume and key drivers of patient/family communications after a visit to a pediatric neurology clinic. Interventions aimed at reducing telephone messages by 15% over a 6-month period were put into place.
METHODS: A baseline audit of clinic phone calls was completed in 2019 to develop an overview of after-visit communications. After-visit telephone calls and web-based portal messages were then tracked for 3-week periods in 2019, 2020, and 2021 to understand key trends. A key driver diagram of patient/family communications after a clinic visit was created, and interventions aimed at reducing telephone messages were discussed. These interventions included optimizing MD-RN workflows, synchronous and asynchronous educational initiatives, and changes to our clinic's voicemail phone tree. Our primary outcome measure was the average monthly telephone call volume, and this measure was tracked monthly from November 2020 through December 2022. Similarly, electronic portal message volume was tracked and served as our balancing measure.
RESULTS: Physicians, nurses, and patients were primary drivers of phone call volume. After interventions were in place, the average monthly call volume decreased by 30% from a baseline of 293 calls to 203 calls. This change was sustained for at least 1 year. The average monthly portal message volume remained consistent throughout the study period at 359 messages.
DISCUSSION: Both physicians and nurses agree that after-visit patient communication affects their workload. This study illustrates that QI methodology can be used to plan and implement interventions aimed at decreasing after-visit telephone calls.
METHODS: A baseline audit of clinic phone calls was completed in 2019 to develop an overview of after-visit communications. After-visit telephone calls and web-based portal messages were then tracked for 3-week periods in 2019, 2020, and 2021 to understand key trends. A key driver diagram of patient/family communications after a clinic visit was created, and interventions aimed at reducing telephone messages were discussed. These interventions included optimizing MD-RN workflows, synchronous and asynchronous educational initiatives, and changes to our clinic's voicemail phone tree. Our primary outcome measure was the average monthly telephone call volume, and this measure was tracked monthly from November 2020 through December 2022. Similarly, electronic portal message volume was tracked and served as our balancing measure.
RESULTS: Physicians, nurses, and patients were primary drivers of phone call volume. After interventions were in place, the average monthly call volume decreased by 30% from a baseline of 293 calls to 203 calls. This change was sustained for at least 1 year. The average monthly portal message volume remained consistent throughout the study period at 359 messages.
DISCUSSION: Both physicians and nurses agree that after-visit patient communication affects their workload. This study illustrates that QI methodology can be used to plan and implement interventions aimed at decreasing after-visit telephone calls.
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