Back to Search
Start Over
Health care provider time in public primary care facilities in Lima, Peru: a cross-sectional time motion study
- Source :
- BMC Health Services Research, Vol 21, Iss 1, Pp 1-11 (2021), BMC Health Services Research
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- BioMed Central, 2021.
-
Abstract
- Background In Peru, a majority of individuals bypass primary care facilities even for routine services. Efforts to strengthen primary care must be informed by understanding of current practice. We conducted a time motion assessment in primary care facilities in Lima with the goals of assessing the feasibility of this method in an urban health care setting in Latin America and of providing policy makers with empirical evidence on the use of health care provider time in primary care. Methods This cross-sectional continuous observation time motion study took place from July – September 2019. We used two-stage sampling to draw a sample of shifts for doctors, nurses, and midwives in primary health facilities and applied the Work Observation Method by Activity Timing tool to capture type and duration of provider activities over a 6-h shift. We summarized time spent on patient care, paper and electronic record-keeping, and non-work (personal and inactive) activities across provider cadres. Observations are weighted by inverse probability of selection. Results Two hundred seventy-five providers were sampled from 60 facilities; 20% could not be observed due to provider absence (2% schedule error, 8% schedule change, 10% failure to appear). One hundred seventy-four of the 220 identified providers consented (79.1%) and were observed for a total of 898 h of provider time comprising 30,312 unique tasks. Outpatient shifts included substantial time on patient interaction (110, 82, and 130 min for doctors, nurses, and midwives respectively) and on paper records (132, 97, and 141 min) on average. Across all shifts, 1 in 6 h was spent inactive or on personal activities. Two thirds of midwives used computers compared to half of nurses and one third of doctors. Conclusions The time motion study is a feasible method to capture primary care operations in Latin American countries and inform health system strengthening. In the case of Lima, absenteeism undermines health worker availability in primary care facilities, and inactive time further erodes health workforce availability. Productive time is divided between patient-facing activities and a substantial burden of paper-based record keeping for clinical and administrative purposes. Electronic health records remain incompletely integrated within routine care, particularly beyond midwifery.
- Subjects :
- doctor nurse relation
Health informatics
Health administration
absenteeism
midwife
urban health
0302 clinical medicine
Pregnancy
medical information system
motion
Absenteeism
Peru
030212 general & internal medicine
Duration (project management)
Primary health care
Health Policy
Nursing research
lcsh:Public aspects of medicine
adult
article
feasibility study
electronic health record
Schedule (workplace)
Workforce
outpatient
Female
0305 other medical science
Research Article
medicine.medical_specialty
Health information systems
Health Personnel
probability
health workforce
03 medical and health sciences
Time motion
purl.org/pe-repo/ocde/ford#3.03.02 [https]
medicine
Humans
human
030505 public health
business.industry
Public health
patient care
health care facility
lcsh:RA1-1270
primary health care
Cross-Sectional Studies
Latin America
Family medicine
business
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- BMC Health Services Research, Vol 21, Iss 1, Pp 1-11 (2021), BMC Health Services Research
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....1251c6ed48cf6caae9b937fb215d864b