» Articles » PMID: 35972822

Optimising the Educational Value of Indirect Patient Care

Overview
Journal Med Educ
Specialty Medical Education
Date 2022 Aug 16
PMID 35972822
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Introduction: Indirect patient care activities (IPCA) such as documentation, reviewing investigations and filling out forms require an increasing amount of physician time. While an essential part of patient care, rising rates of IPCA work correspond with increases in physician burnout and job dissatisfaction. It is not known how best to prepare residents in IPCA-heavy specialties (e.g. family medicine) for this aspect of their career. This study investigates how educators and residency programmes can optimise IPCA work during residency to best prepare residents for future practice.

Methods: Using Constructivist Grounded Theory, we conducted focus groups and individual interviews with 42 clinicians (19 family medicine residents, 16 family physicians in the first 5 years of practice and 7 family physician educators). All participants were connected to one family medicine residency programme. We analysed interview data iteratively, using a staged approach to constant comparative analysis.

Results: While residents, early career physicians and educators perceived the educational value of IPCAs differently, they all reported IPCAs as a necessary weight that family physicians carry throughout their career. Some residents described IPCAs as a burden, creating inequities in workload and interfering with other learning and personal opportunities. In contrast, educators conceptualised IPCAs as an opportunity to build and develop the skills required to carry the weight of IPCAs throughout their career. We make specific recommendations for helping residents recognise this educational opportunity, such as clarifying expectations, navigating equity, understanding purpose and maintaining consistency when teaching IPCAs.

Conclusion: IPCAs are a key competency for many medical residents but require explicit pedagogical attention. If the educational opportunities are not made explicit, residents may miss the opportunity to develop strategies for practice management, professional boundaries, and administrative efficiencies.

Citing Articles

Beyond the Exam Room: Teaching Intervisit Care to Internal Medicine Residents.

Mulligan M, Breviu A, Hall S, Stenehjem K, Cioletti A MedEdPORTAL. 2025; 20:11479.

PMID: 39741870 PMC: 11685312. DOI: 10.15766/mep_2374-8265.11479.


Interventions to Mitigate EHR and Documentation Burden in Health Professions Trainees: A Scoping Review.

Levy D, Rossetti S, Rossetti S, Brandt C, Brandt C, Melnick E Appl Clin Inform. 2024; 16(1):111-127.

PMID: 39366661 PMC: 11798655. DOI: 10.1055/a-2434-5177.


Training in Team-Based Practices: A Descriptive Analysis of Family Medicine Postgraduate Site Distribution across Canada.

Elma A, Yang L, Chang I, Grierson L Healthc Policy. 2023; 19(2):48-62.

PMID: 38105667 PMC: 10751758. DOI: 10.12927/hcpol.2023.27233.


Family physicians' moral distress when caring for patients experiencing social inequities: a critical narrative inquiry in primary care.

Molinaro M, Shen K, Agarwal G, Inglis G, Vanstone M Br J Gen Pract. 2023; 74(738):e41-e48.

PMID: 37957021 PMC: 10664150. DOI: 10.3399/BJGP.2023.0193.