Time is of the essence: an observational time-motion study of internal medicine residents while they are on duty

Authors

  • Cameron Leafloor University of Ottawa
  • Erin (Yiran) Liu McGill University
  • Cathy Code University of Ottawa
  • Heather Lochnan University of Ottawa
  • Erin Keely University of Ottawa
  • Deanna Rothwell The Ottawa Hospital Research Institute
  • Alan Forster University of Ottawa
  • Allen Huang University of Ottawa http://orcid.org/0000-0003-2680-7657

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36834/cmej.36948

Keywords:

time-motion, duty hours, workflow, measurement

Abstract

Background: The effects of changes to resident physician duty hours need to be measureable. This time-motion study was done to record internal medicine residents’ workflow while on duty and to determine the feasibility of capturing detailed data using a mobile electronic tool.

Methods: Junior and senior residents were shadowed by a single observer during six-hour blocks of time, covering all seven days. Activities were recorded in real-time. Eighty-nine activities grouped into nine categories were determined a priori.

Results: A total of 17,714 events were recorded, encompassing 516 hours of observation. Time was apportioned in the following categories: Direct Patient Care (22%), Communication (19%), Personal tasks (15%), Documentation (14%), Education (13%), Indirect care (11%), Transit (6%), Administration (0.6%), and Non-physician tasks (0.4%). Nineteen percent of the education time was spent in self-directed learning activities. Only 9% of the total on duty time was spent in the presence of patients. Sixty-five percent of communication time was devoted to information transfer. A total of 968 interruptions were recorded which took on average 93.5 seconds each to service.

Conclusion: Detailed recording of residents’ workflow is feasible and can now lead to the measurement of the effects of future changes to residency training. Education activities accounted for 13% of on-duty time. 

Author Biographies

  • Cameron Leafloor, University of Ottawa
    Medical Student
  • Erin (Yiran) Liu, McGill University
    Department of Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics
  • Cathy Code, University of Ottawa

    Department of Medicine

    Division of General Internal Medicine

  • Heather Lochnan, University of Ottawa

    Department of Medicine

    Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism

  • Erin Keely, University of Ottawa

    Department of Medicine

    Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism

  • Deanna Rothwell, The Ottawa Hospital Research Institute
    Quality and Performance Measurement, The Ottawa Hospital
  • Alan Forster, University of Ottawa

    Department of Medicine

    Division of General Internal Medicine

    Quality and Performance Measurement, The Ottawa Hospital

  • Allen Huang, University of Ottawa

    Head, Division of Geriatric Medicine

    Department of Medicine

    University of Ottawa

Downloads

Published

2017-07-04

Issue

Section

Original Research

How to Cite

1.
Time is of the essence: an observational time-motion study of internal medicine residents while they are on duty. Can. Med. Ed. J [Internet]. 2017 Jul. 4 [cited 2025 Dec. 15];8(3):e49-70. Available from: https://dev.journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/cmej/article/view/36948