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- Stephen M Carek, Brittany L Farrow, and Vicki Nelson.
- Prisma Health, University of South Carolina School of Medicine, Greenville, SC.
- Fam Med. 2024 Feb 1; 56 (2): 115119115-119.
Background And ObjectivesContinuity of care is a core concept at the heart of primary care practices. Increased patient-provider continuity of care is associated with better satisfaction scores, better clinical outcomes, decreased hospitalizations and emergency department utilization, improved completion of preventive health services, adherence to medical treatment plans, and improved show rates. Compared to traditional outpatient practices, resident teaching clinics traditionally have lower rates of continuity and face unique challenges in improving continuity given the curricular demands, complex scheduling, and high turnover of providers. The objective of our study was to assess the impact of front office training and new electronic medical record (EMR) scheduling protocols on resident continuity in a family medicine teaching clinic.MethodsFrom July 2021 through May 2022, optimized scheduling through a provider search function in the EMR was implemented in a family medicine teaching clinic. We compared the monthly continuity rates between corresponding months in the prior year and the intervention year.ResultsOver an 11-month implementation process, continuity for resident physicians increased from 36.4% to 64.6% (χ2=675.41, P<.001) using EMR tools and scheduling search functions to improve and sustain continuity over the study period.ConclusionsThis intervention to enhance continuity in a family medicine residency clinic led to rapid and sustained improvement in provider continuity. This result demonstrates that optimization of EMR scheduling with tools and protocols can improve overall continuity. This scheduling process can likely be applied to clinical sites for residency programs across disciplines.
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