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. 2014 Mar 11;29(7):1040–1047. doi: 10.1007/s11606-014-2817-x

Table 4.

Unadjusted and Adjusted Associations Between Rounding Variables and Increased Time Spent Per Patient During Interprofessional Rounds (n = 412 Rounding Sessions)

Variable - n (%) “High” time spent at bedside (n = 203) Unadjusted OR (95 % CI) Adjusted OR (95 % CI)a
Team’s resident year-of-training
 Junior resident 130 1
 Senior resident 73 1.07 (0.72–1.62)
Attending physician years since residency graduation:
 ≤4 87 2.38 (1.44–3.95) 2.51 (1.49–4.25)
 5–15 76 1.82 (1.10–3.02) 1.91 (1.13–3.21)
 ≥16 40 1 1
Team census:
 ≤11 48 1.16 (0.68–1.98) 1.07 (0.61–1.88)
 12–13 106 1.67 (1.05–2.67) 1.64 (1.01–2.66)
 ≥14 49 1 1
General medicine unit census:
 ≤5 63 0.88 (0.53–1.47)
 6–7 81 0.77 (0.48–1.24)
 ≥8 59 1
Intermediate care unit census:
 ≤2 110 1.30 (0.88–1.93)
 ≥3 93 1
“Overflow” unit censusb:
 ≤2 66 1.05 (0.63–1.73)
 3–4 78 0.91 (0.57–1.47)
 ≥5 59 1
Weekday
 No 46 1 1
 Yes 157 1.71 (1.10–2.65) 2.04 (1.26–3.30)
Call day
 No 146 1
 Yes 57 1.46 (0.93–2.30)
Attending physician “new to service”
 No 175 1
 Yes 28 0.93 (0.53–1.62)
Intern or resident in clinic
 No 162 1.53 (0.97–2.43) 2.22 (1.32–3.72)
 Yes 41 1 1

“High” time spent at bedside = number of minutes greater than median value (> 8.0 min)

aMultivariable model included control variables that were associated with “high” minutes spent per patient during interprofessional rounds in bivariate analysis (p < 0.1)

b“Overflow” units refer to non-medicine specific units throughout the hospital