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Effect of Smartphone-Based Messaging on Interns and Nurses at an Academic Medical Center: Observational Study
by
Kher, Sucharita
, Chandler, Daniel
, Madabhushi, Sankirth
, Nguyen, Andrew M
, Murzycki, Jennifer
, Davis, Michael
, Hsia, Katie
, Harvey, William
in
Academic Medical Centers
/ Clinical Communication, Electronic Consultation and Telehealth
/ Email Communication, Web-Based Communication, Secure Messaging
/ Humans
/ Internship and Residency
/ Nurses - statistics & numerical data
/ Nursing Communication
/ Original Paper
/ Smartphone - statistics & numerical data
/ Text Messaging - statistics & numerical data
/ Workflow
2025
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Effect of Smartphone-Based Messaging on Interns and Nurses at an Academic Medical Center: Observational Study
by
Kher, Sucharita
, Chandler, Daniel
, Madabhushi, Sankirth
, Nguyen, Andrew M
, Murzycki, Jennifer
, Davis, Michael
, Hsia, Katie
, Harvey, William
in
Academic Medical Centers
/ Clinical Communication, Electronic Consultation and Telehealth
/ Email Communication, Web-Based Communication, Secure Messaging
/ Humans
/ Internship and Residency
/ Nurses - statistics & numerical data
/ Nursing Communication
/ Original Paper
/ Smartphone - statistics & numerical data
/ Text Messaging - statistics & numerical data
/ Workflow
2025
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Effect of Smartphone-Based Messaging on Interns and Nurses at an Academic Medical Center: Observational Study
by
Kher, Sucharita
, Chandler, Daniel
, Madabhushi, Sankirth
, Nguyen, Andrew M
, Murzycki, Jennifer
, Davis, Michael
, Hsia, Katie
, Harvey, William
in
Academic Medical Centers
/ Clinical Communication, Electronic Consultation and Telehealth
/ Email Communication, Web-Based Communication, Secure Messaging
/ Humans
/ Internship and Residency
/ Nurses - statistics & numerical data
/ Nursing Communication
/ Original Paper
/ Smartphone - statistics & numerical data
/ Text Messaging - statistics & numerical data
/ Workflow
2025
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Effect of Smartphone-Based Messaging on Interns and Nurses at an Academic Medical Center: Observational Study
Journal Article
Effect of Smartphone-Based Messaging on Interns and Nurses at an Academic Medical Center: Observational Study
2025
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Overview
Digital communication between nurses and medicine interns plays a crucial role in patient care. However, excessive messaging may contribute to alert fatigue, potentially affecting workflow efficiency and clinical decision-making. Although prior research has examined general messaging behaviors among clinicians, few studies have specifically analyzed messaging patterns between nurses and interns, who serve as primary points of contact in inpatient care.
This study aims to quantitatively characterize messaging patterns between the primary nurse and primary provider (ie, medicine intern) of hospitalized patients at an academic medical center in order to identify communication burdens and potential inefficiencies. By identifying trends in message volume, timing, and response rates, we seek to inform strategies to optimize communication workflows and mitigate alert fatigue.
At a large academic hospital (Tufts Medical Center, Boston, MA), we analyzed secure messaging transactions between internal medicine interns and nurses across three medical-surgical units over 6 months. Transaction metadata, time stamps, and unique message tokens were extracted. Data processing was performed using Python, Microsoft Excel, and R. Message volume, interaction frequencies, and response times were analyzed using measures of central tendency and statistical tests of significance.
A total of 61,057 unique messages were exchanged between interns and nurses, with interns exchanging 2.5 times more messages per day with nurses than vice versa (P<.001). Messaging volume exhibited diurnal variation, indicating periods of increased communication burden. Interns read messages from nurses within a median of 35 (range: 0-3589) seconds, whereas nurses read messages from interns within a median of 26 (range: 0-3584) seconds (P<.001). The longest message response delays occurred at 4 AM, whereas the shortest occurred at 8 AM.
Interns experience a significantly higher messaging burden than nurses, with distinct peaks in message volume during morning rounds and overnight shifts. These findings suggest a need for interventions such as optimized digital communication protocols to reduce nonessential messaging and alert fatigue. Future research should explore the effectiveness of these interventions in enhancing workflow efficiency and the development of both in-person and digital interventions to optimize communication workflows and mitigate alert fatigue.
Publisher
JMIR Publications
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