Workflows should work for clinicians—not the other way around. Subtitle: Studies show that involving all stakeholders in creating workflows—especially clinicians at the bedside—helps remove unnecessary tasks and increase efficiency.
Workflows designed with input from all stakeholders—including leaders and frontline clinicians—help identify and remove low-value tasks, boost role clarity, and ensure efficiency without overburdening staff
#BurnoutBusters: • Assess and delegate tasks • Join committees to push for reforms • Provide peer education on EHR efficiency • Advocate for workflow changes and system-level support
Graphic for upcoming complimentary CME/CE Webinar on October 22nd at 12 ET: Beyond the Paperwork: Confronting Administrative Harm. Topics include: The Hidden Harm: Learn how administrative processes, while intended to help, can unintentionally create barriers that harm patients and over-burden healthcare professionals; A Growing Problem: Understand the rise of "administrative harm" and its significant impact on both patients and clinicians; Solutions for Safety: Discover key strategies to address this issue, including fostering inclusive decision making, promoting psychological safety, and building accountability for administrative choices.
#RiskTipTuesday: Clinicians deserve workflows that work! #HighlyReliableWorkflows and #BurnoutBusters can cut administrative overload and improve care.
✔️Reassess tasks
✔️Push for reforms
✔️Educate peers
Join our webinar on #AdministrativeHarm, 10/22: link.med-iq.com/K3XBdU