Summary
Background: Electronic health records (EHRs) have been shown to increase physician
workload. One EHR feature that contributes to increased workload is asynchronous alerts
(also known as inbox notifications) related to test results, referral responses, medication
refill requests, and messages from physicians and other health care professionals.
This alert-related workload results in negative cognitive outcomes, but its effect
on affective outcomes, such as burnout, has been under-studied.
Objectives: To examine EHR alert-related workload (both objective and subjective)
as a predictor of burnout in primary care providers (PCPs), in order to ultimately
inform interventions aimed at reducing burnout due to alert workload.
Methods: A cross-sectional questionnaire and focus group of 16 PCPs at a large medical
center in the southern United States.
Results: Subjective, but not objective, alert workload was related to two of the three
dimensions of burnout, including physical fatigue (p = 0.02) and cognitive weariness
(p = 0.04), when controlling for organizational tenure. To reduce alert workload and
subsequent burnout, participants indicated a desire to have protected time for alert
management, fewer unnecessary alerts, and improvements to the EHR system.
Conclusions: Burnout associated with alert workload may be in part due to subjective
differences at an individual level, and not solely a function of the objective work
environment. This suggests the need for both individual and organizational-level interventions
to improve alert workload and subsequent burnout. Additional research should confirm
these findings in larger, more representative samples.
Citation: Gregory ME, Russo E, Singh H. Electronic health record alert-related workload as
a predictor of burnout in primary care providers. Appl Clin Inform 2017; 8: 686–697
https://doi.org/10.4338/ACI-2017-01-RA-0003
Keywords
Electronic health records - workload - burnout - health information technology - safety