RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Primary Care Patients’ and Staff’s Perceptions of Self-Rooming as Alternative to Waiting Rooms JF The Annals of Family Medicine JO Ann Fam Med FD American Academy of Family Physicians SP 46 OP 53 DO 10.1370/afm.2909 VO 21 IS 1 A1 Edmond Ramly A1 Sandra A. Kamnetz A1 C. Elizabeth Perry A1 Mark A. Micek A1 Brian G. Arndt A1 Jennifer E. Lochner A1 Sarah Davis A1 Elizabeth R. Trowbridge A1 Maureen A. Smith YR 2023 UL http://www.annfammed.org/content/21/1/46.abstract AB PURPOSE Most patients are escorted to exam rooms (escorted rooming) although patients directing themselves to their exam room (self-rooming) saves patient and staff time while increasing patient satisfaction. This study assesses patient and staff perceptions after pragmatic implementation of self-rooming.METHODS In October-December 2020, we surveyed patients and staff in 25 primary care clinics after our institution expanded self-rooming from 4 specially built clinics during the COVID-19 pandemic. Semi-structured surveys asked about rooming process used, rooming process preferred, and perceptions of self-rooming compared with escorted rooming.RESULTS Most patients (n = 1,561) preferred self-rooming (86%), especially among patients aged <65 years and in family medicine clinics. Few patients felt less welcomed (10.6%), less cared about (6.8%), more isolated (15.6%), more lost/confused (7.6%), or more frustrated (3.2%) with self-rooming compared with escorted rooming. Early-adopter clinics that implemented self-rooming ≤2016 had even lower rates of patients feeling more isolated, lost/confused, or frustrated with self-rooming compared with escorted rooming.Over one-half of staff (n = 241; 180 clinical, 61 nonclinical) preferred self-rooming (59%) and thought most patients liked self-rooming (65.8%), especially among clinical staff and in early adopter clinics (≤2016). Few staff reported worse waiting times for patients (12.4%), medical assistants (MAs) (15.9%), and clinicians (16.4%) or worse crowding in waiting areas (1.7%) and hallways (10.1%). Unlike patient-reported confusion (7.6%), most staff thought self-rooming led to more patient confusion (63.8%), except in early-adopter clinics (44.4%).CONCLUSIONS Self-rooming is a patient-centered innovation that is also acceptable to staff. We demonstrated that pragmatic implementation is feasible across primary care without expensive technology or specially designed buildings.