News | Electronic Medical Records (EMR) | September 07, 2016

Results indicate physicians spend almost half their time on EHR and deskwork activities, and just over a quarter of their time with patients

AMA, American Medical Association study, EMRs, electronic medical records, physician burnout

September 7, 2016 — Technological and administrative obstacles are significantly cutting into available time for physicians to engage with patients. Nearly half a physician’s office day is now filled by data entry into electronic medical records (EHRs) and administrative desk work, according to a new time-motion study conducted by experts at the American Medical Association (AMA) and Dartmouth-Hitchcock healthcare system. The study results were published in the Annals of Internal Medicine.

“This study reveals what many physicians are feeling – data entry and administrative tasks are cutting into the doctor-patient time that is central to medicine and a primary reason many of us became physicians,” said AMA Immediate Past President Steven J. Stack., M.D. “Unfortunately, these demands are not being reconciled with patient priorities and clinical workflow. Clerical tasks and poorly-designed EHRs have physicians suffering from a growing sense that they are neglecting their patients as they try to keep up with an overload of type-and-click tasks.”

During the office day, the study found physicians spent 27 percent of their total time on direct clinical face time with patients and 49.2 percent of their time on EHR and deskwork activities. In other words, for every hour of direct clinical face time to patients, physicians spend nearly two hours of additional time on EHR and deskwork within the office day. Outside of office hours, physicians spend another one to two hours of personal time each night on data entry demands.

Stack highlighted the new study in a presentation to entrepreneurs at MATTER, a Chicago-based healthcare technology incubator and partner in AMA’s effort to have physicians play an influential role in leading innovations that move healthcare forward. Stack noted the findings demonstrate the importance of relying on physician experience to bridge the gap between technology design and the realities of patient care.

“I am not surprised to hear these results, and I can tell you no one who practices medicine today would be surprised by them,” Stack said to the entrepreneurs at MATTER. “But they highlight exactly why new technologies that can bring greater efficiencies to medicine are so important, and why physicians have an important role to play in their development.”

The study quantifies a previous AMA study with Rand Corp. confirming that poorly designed EHRs and administrative obstacles to providing patients with high-quality care are leading contributors to physician burnout. Collaborative studies by the AMA and Mayo Clinic found physician burnout is a growing problem, with 54.4 percent of physicians reporting at least one symptom of burnout in 2014, up from 45.5 percent in 2011. In comparison, prevalence of burnout among the general working population was about 28.5 percent.

For more information: www.annals.org


Related Content

News | Radiology Imaging

Nov. 13, 2025 — Medical imaging AI company Avicenna.AI has launched AVI, a new platform that delivers AI results ...

Time November 13, 2025
arrow
News | Radiology Business

Nov. 12, 2025 — Siemens has announced plans to deconsolidate its remaining stake in Siemens Healthineers (currently ...

Time November 13, 2025
arrow
News | Artificial Intelligence

Nov. 6 — 2025, Gradient Health and DataFirst have announced a strategic partnership designed to bridge the gap between ...

Time November 12, 2025
arrow
News | Teleradiology

Nov. 4, 2025 — Virtual Radiologic (vRad) recently announced the successful commercialization of The vRad Platform — a ...

Time November 10, 2025
arrow
Feature | Archive Cloud Storage | Shujah Dasgupta, Vice President, CitiusTech

Almost two-thirds of health systems are already using (or plan to use) the cloud for storing and viewing medical images ...

Time October 30, 2025
arrow
News | Breast Imaging

Oct. 28, 2025 — QT Imaging Holdings, Inc., a medical device company focused on radiation-free imaging technology, has ...

Time October 28, 2025
arrow
News | Remote Viewing Systems

Sept. 2, 2025 — As American hospitals continue to grapple with an increasing shortage of specialized medical imaging ...

Time September 04, 2025
arrow
News | PACS

Aug. 26, 2025 — Core Sound Imaging, the company behind the widely established Studycast medical imaging workflow ...

Time August 26, 2025
arrow
News | Digital Pathology

Aug. 12, 2025 — Fujifilm Healthcare Americas Corp. has announced that a leading health system with hospital sites ...

Time August 12, 2025
arrow
News | Cybersecurity

Aug. 07, 2025 —- New research by European cybersecurity company Modat revealed more than 1.2 million internet-connected ...

Time August 08, 2025
arrow
Subscribe Now