• J Hosp Med · Nov 2010

    The use of smartphones for clinical communication on internal medicine wards.

    • Robert C Wu, Dante Morra, Sherman Quan, Sannie Lai, Samira Zanjani, Howard Abrams, and Peter G Rossos.
    • Division of General Internal Medicine, University Health Network, Toronto, Canada. robert.wu@uhn.on.ca
    • J Hosp Med. 2010 Nov 1; 5 (9): 553-9.

    BackgroundCommunication between clinicians is hampered by the frequent difficulty in reaching the most responsible physician for a patient as well as the use of outdated methods such as numeric paging. The aim of this study was to evaluate the use of smartphones to improve communication on internal medicine wards.MethodAt the Toronto General Hospital, residents were provided with smartphones. To simplify reaching the most responsible resident for a patient, a smartphone designated as "Team BlackBerry" was also carried by each senior resident and then passed to the resident covering the team at night and on weekends. Nurses were able to send email messages or call smartphones directly.ResultsThere were on average of 9.1 incoming calls, 6.6 outgoing calls, 14.3 received emails, and 2.8 sent emails per day to each Team BlackBerry. Team BlackBerrys received up to 35 calls and 57 emails per day. Residents strongly preferred the smartphones over conventional paging with perceived improvements in all items measured and felt that it improved efficiency and communication. Although nurses perceived a reduction in the time required to contact a physician (27.6 vs. 11 minutes P < 0.001), their overall satisfaction with physician's response time for urgent issues did not improve significantly.DiscussionWhen smartphones were used for clinical communication, residents perceived an improvement in communication with them. Residents strongly preferred emails as opposed to telephone calls as the prime method of communication. Further objective evaluation is necessary to determine if this intervention improves efficiency and more importantly, quality of care.Copyright © 2010 Society of Hospital Medicine.

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