43 minutes—that’s the median length of time a
hospitalized elderly patient spends standing or walking daily, reports a
New York Times
story.
Not only that, the study from which the 43 minutes number came also noted that
elderly spend 83% of their hospitalizations lying in bed.
The paper was a study of the activity of elderly patients
who spent about 6 hours per day on their feet before they were admitted.
Failure to walk around in the hospital had significant negative effects on the
activity levels of patients for as long as two years after discharge from the
hospital.
That brings up the question, why didn't they walk more?
According to the Times, "Even when physicians recognize
the hazards of immobility and write orders that include ambulation, overworked
staff can’t always find the time."
Ah, the real question is, why can't they find the time?
I'll tell you why. They are too busy documenting unnecessary
garbage in the electronic medical record (EMR).
Here's an example of what I am referring too. This was
tweeted on June 2, 2013:
"@Apathetic_Cynic: Check da box @docgrumpy: Intubated,
GCS of 3 x 2 weeks. Today someone documented counseling pt to quit
smoking"
If you don't speak Twitter, here's the translation:
A doctor who calls himself Apathetic Cynic retweeted what a
another doctor (docgrumpy) wrote which said that a comatose patient who was
completely unresponsive for two weeks in an ICU was documented to have received
smoking cessation counseling.
Of course, the patient could not possibly have understood
such counseling. It likely never happened. But the box in the EMR was properly checked,
and all is right with the bean counters.
A
paper
from the Journal of General Internal Medicine found that interns spent 12% of
their time with pts. That's 8 minutes per hour. "Computer use occupied 40%
of interns' time," much of it spent documenting.
Ask any nurse, and he will tell you that the EMR demands ever-increasing amounts of documentation such that the
documentation itself is now the endpoint. On hospital I am familiar with has a
7-page nursing assessment section that must be completed for any admitted
patient.
Here are the sections that need to be filled out.
Cognition, verbalization, hearing, vision, educational
barriers, pain assessment, restraint information, health history, advance
directive, alcohol and drug use history, smoking history, diabetes mellitus,
discharge planning (self-management of health, latex allergy screening,
nutrition assessment, room service appropriate, urinary elimination habits ,
bowel elimination habits, activities of daily living/mobility, fall risk
assessment, legal contact information, living situation and primary care giver,
abuse, opt out/visitor restriction, suicide assessment, psycho-social concerns,
spiritual needs, allergies, vital signs, height/weight, respiratory,
cardiovascular, peripheral vascular, venous access, tubes and drains,
neuromuscular, skin-Braden scale, skin assessment, skin co-morbidities, HEENT,
gastrointestinal.
How long do you suppose that takes? There is a fair amount
of redundancy too. For example, nutritional assessment will be done by the
nutritionist. A complete history and physical should be done by the physician
(or maybe not, because she has a lot of documenting to do too). Discharge planning
is done by case managers and social workers. Contact information is obtained by
the admitting office.
And guess what? A number of these nursing assessments must
be documented every shift.
Now do you wonder why the staff doesn't have time to get the patients up and walking?