Controlled Trial of Direct Physician Order Entry
Effects on Physicians' Time Utilization in Ambulatory Primary Care Internal Medicine Practices
- Correspondence and reprints: J. Marc Overhage, MD, PhD, Regenstrief Institute for Health Care, 5th Floor, Regenstrief Health Center, 1050 Wishard Boulevard, Indianapolis, IN 46202; e-mail: <joverhag{at}iupui.edu>
- Received 6 February 2001
- Accepted 16 March 2001
Abstract
Objective Direct physician order entry (POE) offers many potential benefits, but evidence suggests that POE requires substantially more time than traditional paper-based ordering methods. The Medical Gopher is a well-accepted system for direct POE that has been in use for more than 15 years. The authors hypothesized that physicians using the Gopher would not spend any more time writing orders than physicians using paper-based methods.
Design A randomized controlled trial of POE using the Medical Gopher system in 11 primary care internal medicine practices.
Measurements The authors collected detailed time use data using time motion studies of the physicians and surveyed their opinions about the POE system.
Results The authors found that physicians using the Gopher spent 2.2 min more per patient overall, but when duplicative and administrative tasks were taken into account, physicians were found to have spent only 0.43 min more per patient. With experience, the order entry time fell by 3.73 min per patient. The survey revealed that the physicians believed that the system improved their patient care and wanted the Gopher to continue to be available in their practices.
Conclusions Little extra time, if any, was required for physicians to use the POE system. With experience in its use, physicians may even save time while enjoying the many benefits of POE.
Footnotes
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↵* Paul Tang, MD, written communication, Jul 12, 1995.








