Waqas Shuaib’s research while affiliated with Chinook Regional Hospital and other places

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Publications (63)


Productivity metrics in total patients seen per hour and total wRVUs generated per hour on pre- and post-scribe cohorts.
Time–motion analysis in pre- and post-scribe cohorts.
Patient satisfaction metrics as measured by questionnaire in pre- and post-scribe cohorts.
Pre-scribe and post-scribe patient throughput measures.
Time–motion analysis of physician activities.
Impact of a scribe program on patient throughput, physician productivity, and patient satisfaction in a community-based emergency department
  • Article
  • Full-text available

March 2019

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89 Reads

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34 Citations

Waqas Shuaib

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John Hilmi

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[...]

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Previous literature on the impact of scribe programs varies and has mostly been reported from academic institutions or other clinics. We report the implementation of the scribe program in the emergency room of a community hospital and its impact on patient throughput, physician productivity, and patient satisfaction. We performed a quasi-experimental, before-and-after study measuring patient throughput metrics, physician productivity, and patient satisfaction. The intervention measuring the scribe implementation was divided into pre- and post-implementation periods. Patient throughput metrics were (1) door-to-room time, (2) room-to-doc time, (3) door-to-doc time, (4) doc-to-disposition time, and (5) length of stay for discharged/admitted patients. Our secondary outcome was physician productivity, which was calculated by measuring total patients seen per hour and work relative value units per hour. Additionally, we calculated the time-motion analysis in minutes to measure the emergency department physician’s efficiency by recording the following: (1) chart preparation, (2) chart review, (3) doctor–patient interaction, (4) physical examination, and (5) post-visit documentation. Finally, we measured patient satisfaction as provided by Press Ganey surveys. Data analysis was conducted in 12,721 patient encounters in the pre-scribe cohort, and 13,598 patient encounters in the post-scribe cohort. All the patient throughput metrics were statistically significant (p < 0.0001). The patients per hour increased from 2.3 ± 0.3 pre-scribe to 3.2 ± 0.6 post-scribe cohorts (p < 0.001). Total work relative value units per hour increased from 241(3.1 ± 1.5 per hour) pre-scribe cohort to 336 (5.2 ± 1.4 per hour) post-scribe cohort (p < 0.001). The pre-scribe patient satisfaction was high and remained high in the post-scribe cohort. There was a significant increase in the clinician providing satisfactory feedback from the pre-scribe (3.9 ± 0.3) to the post-scribe (4.7 ± 0.1) cohorts (p < 0.01). We describe a prospective trial of medical scribe use in the emergency department setting to improve patient throughput, physician productivity, and patient satisfaction. We illustrate that scribe use in community emergency department is feasible and results in improvement in all three metrics

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Productivity metrics in total patients seen per hour and total wRVUs generated per hour on pre- and post-scribe cohorts.
Time-motion analysis in pre-/post-scribe cohorts.
Patient satisfaction metrics as measured by questionnaire in pre- and post-scribe cohorts.
Pre-scribe and post-scribe patient throughput measures.
Time-motion analysis of physician activities.
Impact of a scribe program on patient throughput, physician productivity, and patient satisfaction in a community-based emergency department

March 2017

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245 Reads

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30 Citations

Previous literature on the impact of scribe programs varies and has mostly been reported from academic institutions or other clinics. We report the implementation of the scribe program in the emergency room of a community hospital and its impact on patient throughput, physician productivity, and patient satisfaction. We performed a quasi-experimental, before-and-after study measuring patient throughput metrics, physician productivity, and patient satisfaction. The intervention measuring the scribe implementation was divided into pre- and post-implementation periods. Patient throughput metrics were (1) door-to-room time, (2) room-to-doc time, (3) door-to-doc time, (4) doc-to-disposition time, and (5) length of stay for discharged/admitted patients. Our secondary outcome was physician productivity, which was calculated by measuring total patients seen per hour and work relative value units per hour. Additionally, we calculated the time-motion analysis in minutes to measure the emergency department physician’s efficiency by recording the following: (1) chart preparation, (2) chart review, (3) doctor–patient interaction, (4) physical examination, and (5) post-visit documentation. Finally, we measured patient satisfaction as provided by Press Ganey surveys. Data analysis was conducted in 12,721 patient encounters in the pre-scribe cohort, and 13,598 patient encounters in the post-scribe cohort. All the patient throughput metrics were statistically significant (p < 0.0001). The patients per hour increased from 2.3 ± 0.3 pre-scribe to 3.2 ± 0.6 post-scribe cohorts (p < 0.001). Total work relative value units per hour increased from 241(3.1 ± 1.5 per hour) pre-scribe cohort to 336 (5.2 ± 1.4 per hour) post-scribe cohort (p < 0.001). The pre-scribe patient satisfaction was high and remained high in the post-scribe cohort. There was a significant increase in the clinician providing satisfactory feedback from the pre-scribe (3.9 ± 0.3) to the post-scribe (4.7 ± 0.1) cohorts (p < 0.01). We describe a prospective trial of medical scribe use in the emergency department setting to improve patient throughput, physician productivity, and patient satisfaction. We illustrate that scribe use in community emergency department is feasible and results in improvement in all three metrics.


Participants before and after the experiment.
Participant information, medical examination, health edification, and medical records before and after intervention.
Child vaccination records.
Health management of the elderly.
Transforming patient care by introducing an electronic medical records initiative in a developing country

December 2016

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96 Reads

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8 Citations

The incorporation of an electronic medical record into patient care is a priority in developed countries, but faces significant obstacles for adoption in developing countries. The goal of our study was to define and assess the efficiency of a personalized intervention on village physicians' use of electronic medical records in rural community health services of underprivileged areas. Six towns were selected with two bordering local health stations from each town. One was randomly given to the intervention group and the other to the control group. A structured on-site intervention was provided to village physicians in the intervention group, for 7 months. The results showed that in the intervention group, the percentage of households with complete records increased. The percentage of clinic medical records and complete child vaccination in the intervention group also increased from 2 to 14 percent (p = <0.05) and from 10 to 23 percent (p = 0.05), respectively. Our investigation demonstrated that on-site education, supervision, and technical support directly correlate with improved use of electronic medical record. Our results report the challenges in implementing such a system and the steps being taken to enhance likelihood of sustainability.




Osseous injuries of the foot: An imaging review. Part 3: The hindfoot

March 2016

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41 Reads

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1 Citation

Emergency Medicine Journal

Injuries to the foot are a common cause for presentation to the emergency department, and imaging is often used to aid in the diagnosis. The foot can be divided into three distinct anatomic regions: the forefoot, midfoot and hindfoot. Our manuscripts comprise a three-part imaging review in which we address the use of radiography as well as advanced imaging modalities. We provide pearls to radiographic interpretation and discuss prognostic implications and classification systems. Part 1 addresses forefoot injuries, part 2 reviews midfoot injuries and part 3 covers the hindfoot.


Osseous injuries of the foot: An imaging review. Part 1: The forefoot

March 2016

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80 Reads

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1 Citation

Emergency Medicine Journal

Injuries to the foot are a common cause for presentation to the ED, and imaging is often used to aid in the diagnosis. The foot can be divided into three distinct anatomical regions: the forefoot, midfoot and hindfoot. Our manuscripts comprise a three-part imaging review in which we address the use of radiography as well as advanced imaging modalities. We provide pearls to radiographic interpretation and discuss prognostic implications and classification systems. Part 1 addresses forefoot injuries, part 2 reviews midfoot injuries and part 3 covers the hindfoot.


Osseous injuries of the foot: An imaging review. Part 2: The midfoot

March 2016

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41 Reads

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1 Citation

Emergency Medicine Journal

Injuries to the foot are a common cause for presentation to the emergency department (ED), and imaging is often used to aid in the diagnosis. The foot can be divided into three distinct anatomic regions: the forefoot, midfoot and hindfoot. Our manuscripts comprise a three-part imaging review in which we address the use of radiography as well as advanced imaging modalities. We provide pearls to radiographic interpretation and discuss prognostic implications and classification systems. Part 1 addressed forefoot injuries, Part 2 reviews midfoot injuries and Part 3 covers the hindfoot.


The reemergence of Zika virus: a review on pathogenesis, clinical manifestations, diagnosis, and treatment

March 2016

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136 Reads

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69 Citations

The American Journal of Medicine

Zika virus (ZKV) is an arbovirus of the Flaviviridae family, which includes West Nile, Dengue Fever, Chikungunya Virus, Yellow Fever, and Japanese encephalitis virus. It is transmitted by the Aedes genus of mosquitoes. Prior to 2015, ZKV outbreaks occurred in areas of Africa, the Pacific Islands and Southeast Asia. The current large outbreak, which began in Brazil, has also emerged throughout a large part of South/Central America, a number of islands in the Caribbean, including Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, and Mexico. A sudden rise in the numbers of infants reported born with microcephaly in Brazil, and the detection of the single-stranded positive RNA virus in the amniotic fluid of affected newborns, has captured medical, mainstream media, and global political attention, causing considerable concern in a post-Ebola global community considerably more focused on the threat of internationally transmissible diseases. The goal of this article is to provide an overview of ZKV for clinicians, with the emphasis on pathogenesis, clinical manifestations, diagnosis, and treatment/preventive measures.



Citations (46)


... P GY-1 internal medicine residents have been reported to spend only 11.8%e13% of a work shift in direct patient care 1 and 5 or more hours a day doing EHR work. 2 The use of medical scribes in settings such as emergency and primary care departments has been shown to reduce time spent in electronic documentation and potentially free physicians for more meaningful work activities. [3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14] The use of scribes with internal medicine residents on inpatient teams has not been studied. ...

Reference:

Scribes with PGY-1 Residents on Inpatient Medicine Teams: Effect on Time Spent in Meaningful Work
Impact of a scribe program on patient throughput, physician productivity, and patient satisfaction in a community-based emergency department

... provider productivity measured by the number of patients seen per hour or relative value units (RVUs) per hour in primary care, [8][9][10][11][12] specialty care, [13][14][15][16] and emergency department settings. [17][18][19] Only a few studies have examined the impact of scribes on provider satisfaction, time spent on documentation, time spent face-to-face with patients, and patient satisfaction. Scribes have been associated with decreases in time spent on documentation and increases in provider satisfaction. ...

Impact of a scribe program on patient throughput, physician productivity, and patient satisfaction in a community-based emergency department

... 22 Whereas in a Pakistani study conducted on patients with lung AC showed that positive EGFR mutation was present in 25% of the patients, but they found insignificant difference in frequency of EGFR mutation with respect to smoking status (p=0.95). 25 ...

Rate of EGFR mutation in patients with pulmonary adenocarcinoma

International Journal of Cancer Therapy and Oncology

... Infection with ZIKV, the causal agent of Zika fever (ZIKF), leads to a temporary febrile illness that affects around 20% of individuals who contract the virus [11]. During the acute phase of ZIKV infection, patients have elevated serum levels of pro-and anti-inflammatory cytokines, including tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα), interleukin (IL) 1β (IL1β), IL2, IL4, IL6, IL9, IL10, IL13, and IL17. ...

The reemergence of Zika virus: a review on pathogenesis, clinical manifestations, diagnosis, and treatment
  • Citing Article
  • March 2016

The American Journal of Medicine

... This rare condition represents <1%-2% of all large joint dislocations and approximately 15% of all talar injuries and was first described by DuFaurest and Judcy in 1811 [2,3]. Usually, this kind of injury affects young male patients [1] with a male-female ratio of about 3:1 [4]. The medial dislocation is the most common one, representing about 80% of the isolated dislocation (without fracture) due to its intrinsic instability in inversion. ...

Osseous injuries of the foot: An imaging review. Part 3: The hindfoot
  • Citing Article
  • March 2016

Emergency Medicine Journal

... Participants also recognised the value of referral for additional assessments available outside of their scope, including advanced imaging, to support diagnosis. Plain radiography and magnetic resonance imaging are currently the gold standard for imaging of sesamoiditis, followed by computed tomography as the third modality of choice [5,[19][20][21][22][23]. Podiatrists in Aotearoa New Zealand can only refer for plain radiography and ultrasound imaging of the lower limb. ...

Osseous injuries of the foot: An imaging review. Part 2: The midfoot
  • Citing Article
  • March 2016

Emergency Medicine Journal

... [57] Zolpidem has a relative brief plasma half-life (2.4 ± 2 h). [58] This medication has been used for relief of insomnia, not only in adults but also in children and adolescents [46], and is well tolerated in patients between 2 and 18 years of age. [59] Zolpidem can be co-administered with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors to improve sleep, without significantly increasing the risk of serotoninergic syndrome or cardiovascular adverse effects. ...

Zolpidem Overdose: A Medical and Ethical Dilemma
  • Citing Article
  • November 2015

American Journal of Therapeutics

... 34 Co-cited reference refers to works that are referenced together in the bibliographies of other publications. 35 Among the 2563 publications, we identified 121,872 co-cited references. Furthermore, the article titled "Regression of Glioblastoma after Chimeric Antigen Receptor T-Cell Therapy," 36 (Table 5). ...

Bibliometric analysis of the top 50 cited respiratory articles
  • Citing Article
  • November 2015

... Potential benefits of dedicated onsite emergency radiologists in the ED include consultation about appropriate imaging, minimizing unnecessary imaging, choosing the most suitable imaging modality and improved report turnaround time. [18][19][20] At our institution, emergency staff radiologists also triage advanced imaging requests, prioritizing the more urgent cases and supervise CT image acquisition of severely ill patients in the technologist control room in order to modify the CT protocol in case of unexpected findings and to give an immediate verbal report (''wet read'') to the requesting physicians. In-house staff radiologists supervise trainees allowing rapid review and finalization of reports and reducing the risk of clinicians making management decisions based on discrepant preliminary reports. ...

Inefficient Resource Use for Patients Who Receive Both a Chest Radiograph and Chest CT in a Single Emergency Department Visit
  • Citing Article
  • September 2015

Journal of the American College of Radiology