Stats · primary sources

The cost of the chart, in numbers we can cite.

Each figure links to a primary source. We update them as new evidence appears, and we note when our priors are wrong.

0%

of every clinic hour goes to the EHR and desk work.

A direct observational study of internal medicine found 49% of physician time was spent on EHR and clerical tasks during clinic hours, vs. 27% on direct patient care.

0%

of physicians report at least one symptom of burnout.

EHR usability is among the strongest predictors. The lower a clinician rates their EHR, the higher their reported burnout.

0%

of physicians say EHRs contribute “greatly” to burnout.

Across recent surveys, a clear majority name the electronic record itself — not patient volume, not pay — as a primary stressor.

Methodology

Where possible we cite peer-reviewed direct-observation studies. Where survey data is used we say so. Numbers are rounded for legibility; underlying citations preserve full precision. Disagreements welcome — send a better source and we will update.

From the federal record

Public-domain reports we lean on.

GAO audits, AHRQ primers, HHS OIG investigations, and ASTP/ONC strategy documents. Federal works carry no copyright (17 U.S.C. § 105); we cite freely and link to the original.