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Physician satisfaction with a multi-platform digital scheduling system

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2017

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Public Library of Science
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Deliberato, Rodrigo Octávio, Leonardo Lima Rocha, Alex Heitor Lima, Caroline Reis Maia Santiago, Jose Cláudio Cyrineu Terra, Alon Dagan, and Leo Anthony Celi. 2017. “Physician satisfaction with a multi-platform digital scheduling system.” PLoS ONE 12 (3): e0174127. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0174127. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0174127.

Abstract

Objective: Physician shift schedules are regularly created manually, using paper or a shared online spreadsheet. Mistakes are not unusual, leading to last minute scrambles to cover a shift. We developed a web-based shift scheduling system and a mobile application tool to facilitate both the monthly scheduling and shift exchanges between physicians. The primary objective was to compare physician satisfaction before and after the mobile application implementation. Methods: Over a 9-month period, three surveys, using the 4-point Likert type scale were performed to assess the physician satisfaction. The first survey was conducted three months prior mobile application release, a second survey three months after implementation and the last survey six months after. Results: 51 (77%) of the physicians answered the baseline survey. Of those, 32 (63%) were males with a mean age of 37.8 ± 5.5 years. Prior to the mobile application implementation, 36 (70%) of the responders were using more than one method to carry out shift exchanges and only 20 (40%) were using the official department report sheet to document shift exchanges. The second and third survey were answered by 48 (73%) physicians. Forty-eight (98%) of them found the mobile application easy or very easy to install and 47 (96%) did not want to go back to the previous method. Regarding physician satisfaction, at baseline 37% of the physicians were unsatisfied or very unsatisfied with shift scheduling. After the mobile application was implementation, only 4% reported being unsatisfied (OR = 0.11, p < 0.001). The satisfaction level improved from 63% to 96% between the first and the last survey. Satisfaction levels significantly increased between the three time points (OR = 13.33, p < 0.001). Conclusion: Our web and mobile phone-based scheduling system resulted in better physician satisfaction.

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Medicine and Health Sciences, Health Care, Health Care Providers, Medical Doctors, Physicians, People and Places, Population Groupings, Professions, Engineering and Technology, Equipment, Cell Phones, Computer and Information Sciences, Computer Applications, Web-Based Applications, Survey Research, Surveys, Computer Software, Health Care Facilities, Hospitals, Software Engineering, Software Development, Pilot Studies

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