Skip to content
  • About
  • Contact
  • Contribute
  • Book
  • Careers
  • Podcast
  • Recommended
  • Speaking
KevinMD
  • All
  • Physician
  • Practice
  • Policy
  • Finance
  • Conditions
  • .edu
  • Patient
  • Meds
  • Tech
  • Social
  • Video
  • All
  • Physician
  • Practice
  • Policy
  • Finance
  • Conditions
  • .edu
  • Patient
  • Meds
  • Tech
  • Social
  • Video
    • All
    • Physician
    • Practice
    • Policy
    • Finance
    • Conditions
    • .edu
    • Patient
    • Meds
    • Tech
    • Social
    • Video
    • About
    • Contact
    • Contribute
    • Book
    • Careers
    • Podcast
    • Recommended
    • Speaking
KevinMD
  • All
  • Physician
  • Practice
  • Policy
  • Finance
  • Conditions
  • .edu
  • Patient
  • Meds
  • Tech
  • Social
  • Video
    • All
    • Physician
    • Practice
    • Policy
    • Finance
    • Conditions
    • .edu
    • Patient
    • Meds
    • Tech
    • Social
    • Video
    • About
    • Contact
    • Contribute
    • Book
    • Careers
    • Podcast
    • Recommended
    • Speaking
  • About KevinMD | Kevin Pho, MD
  • Be heard on social media’s leading physician voice
  • Contact Kevin
  • Discounted enhanced author page
  • DMCA Policy
  • Establishing, Managing, and Protecting Your Online Reputation: A Social Media Guide for Physicians and Medical Practices
  • Group vs. individual disability insurance for doctors: pros and cons
  • KevinMD influencer opportunities
  • Opinion and commentary by KevinMD
  • Physician burnout speakers to keynote your conference
  • Physician Coaching by KevinMD
  • Physician keynote speaker: Kevin Pho, MD
  • Physician Speaking by KevinMD: a boutique speakers bureau
  • Primary care physician in Nashua, NH | Doctor accepting new patients
  • Privacy Policy
  • Recommended services by KevinMD
  • Terms of Use Agreement
  • Thank you for subscribing to KevinMD
  • Thank you for upgrading to the KevinMD enhanced author page
  • The biggest mistake doctors make when purchasing disability insurance
  • The doctor’s guide to disability insurance: short-term vs. long-term
  • The KevinMD ToolKit
  • Upgrade to the KevinMD enhanced author page
  • Why own-occupation disability insurance is a must for doctors

How scut work has changed for today’s generation of doctors

Kenneth Lin, MD
Physician
December 27, 2013
Share
Tweet
Share

When I was an acting medicine intern in Manhattan’s Bellevue Hospital at the turn of the century, all employees who provided the hospital’s “ancillary services” went home between the hours of 5pm and 8am. It was the job of the on-call interns to fill in. If a patient needed a stat blood draw or IV line replacement in the middle of the night, his nurse paged the intern to do it. If I wanted a vial of blood to reach the lab before the morning, the only way to do it was to carry it there myself. If a patient needed an urgent x-ray or CT scan, I personally navigated his or her stretcher from room to elevator and through the corridors to radiology. (Even during daytime hours, this was often the most efficient way to complete this task.) In those days when x-rays and scans were actually printed on sheets of transparent plastic and stored in file folders, it was also the intern’s job to hunt down images needed for morning rounds.

Generations of doctors-in-training have given the name “scut work” to these kinds of tedious, disagreeable chores that do not require a doctor’s degree but are nonetheless essential to patient care. More than a decade later, interns and residents continue to toil at similar unrewarding tasks in hospitals all over the U.S. and around the world.

But scut has evolved in the era of electronic medical records to mean more than late-night blood draws and transporting patients and medical records. Scut work is now performed by physicians with decades of post-residency experience, at all hours, in outpatient and inpatient practice.

It goes by important-sounding names: “stage 2 meaningful Uuse” or “NCQA Certified Patient Centered Medical Home.” Specific tasks involve clicking through endless series of drop-down boxes to document smoking cessation counseling, order flu shots and age-appropriate cancer screenings, and record transitions of care and receipt of referral notes. These are all things that I would have documented in a free-text or dictated note, but must now jump through electronic hoops to get credit from private and public payers who believe that primary care patients will ultimately benefit from all this clicking even as it distracts my and my colleagues’ attention away from the real work of doctoring.

In a recent editorial in Annals of Internal Medicine, Drs. Christine Sinsky and John Beasley argue that “texting while doctoring” is a potential patient safety hazard:

In clinics across the country we have observed patients send signals of depression, disagreement, and lack of understanding and have witnessed kind, compassionate, and well-intended physicians missing these signals while they multitask. These physicians are concentrating not only on the patient but on typing the history, checking boxes, performing order entry, and other electronic tasks … Computerized order entry displaces to the physician clerical tasks once performed by others, increasing time commitment and cognitive interruptions.

The authors suggest that supporting team-based care models that rely on non-physicians to do the bulk of documentation may save the physician-patient interaction. But this is unlikely to happen if physicians are required by federal regulators to type in orders themselves, or if new payment schemes do not rapidly supplant fee-for-service and render current billing templates obsolete.

In contrast, Dr. Diane Chang describes old-school scut work in JAMA’s “A Piece of My Mind” as “the physical, backbreaking, day-to-day work of taking care of another person.” She shares scenes of doctors, nurse’s aides, and other health workers debriding infected ulcers, cleaning up vomit and feces, feeding and bathing and changing beds.”

Acts of caring are sacred: feeding the sick and old, cleaning them, and tending to their wounds are in some ways as intimate as you can get with another body,” she writes. “In performing these acts, we bear witness to people naked and infirm, at the beginning of life or at the very end, or at the most vulnerable moments in their lives.”

I don’t want to go back to doing scut at Bellevue. I’m not nostalgic about trying to place a new 18-gauge IV in a patient without veins at four in the morning, or replacing a delirious patient’s nasogastric tube for the fifth time in as many hours because he kept pulling it out. But at least that kind of scut, unlike the tedious tasks involved in electronic documentation, was work that was meaningful to patients.

Kenneth Lin is a family physician who blogs at Common Sense Family Doctor.

Prev

5 universal problems hospitals need to solve

December 27, 2013 Kevin 1
…
Next

Why a physician shortage is inevitable

December 27, 2013 Kevin 85
…

Tagged as: Hospital-Based Medicine, Residency

< Previous Post
5 universal problems hospitals need to solve
Next Post >
Why a physician shortage is inevitable

ADVERTISEMENT

More by Kenneth Lin, MD

  • How to recruit more students into family medicine

    Kenneth Lin, MD
  • When should you prescribe statins for older adults?

    Kenneth Lin, MD
  • Clinical practice guidelines have problems, but they’re not broken

    Kenneth Lin, MD

More in Physician

  • Moral injury in medicine: When silence becomes a survival strategy

    Timothy Lesaca, MD
  • Medical misinformation: Navigating vaccine hesitancy with empathy

    Christine J. Ko, MD
  • The American Board of Internal Medicine maintenance of certification lawsuit: What physicians need to know

    Brian Hudes, MD
  • Physician weight loss strategy: Why willpower isn’t enough in 2026

    Archana Reddy Shrestha, MD
  • Demedicalize dying: Why end-of-life care needs a spiritual reset

    Kevin Haselhorst, MD
  • Physician due process: Surviving the court of public opinion

    Muhamad Aly Rifai, MD
  • Most Popular

  • Past Week

    • Why Medicare must cover atrial fibrillation screening to prevent strokes

      Radhesh K. Gupta | Conditions
    • My wife’s story: How DEA and CDC guidelines destroyed our golden years

      Monty Goddard & Richard A. Lawhern, PhD | Conditions
    • Why medical school DEI mission statements matter for future physicians

      Aditi Mahajan, MEd, Laura Malmut, MD, MEd, Jared Stowers, MD, and Khaleel Atkinson | Education
    • The American Board of Internal Medicine maintenance of certification lawsuit: What physicians need to know

      Brian Hudes, MD | Physician
    • Teaching joy transforms the future of medical practice [PODCAST]

      The Podcast by KevinMD | Podcast
    • The necessity of getting lost to find yourself

      Michele Luckenbaugh | Conditions
  • Past 6 Months

    • Will AI replace primary care physicians?

      P. Dileep Kumar, MD, MBA | Tech
    • A physician father on the Dobbs decision and reproductive rights

      Travis Walker, MD, MPH | Physician
    • What is the minority tax in medicine?

      Tharini Nagarkar and Maranda C. Ward, EdD, MPH | Education
    • Why the U.S. health care system is failing patients and physicians

      John C. Hagan III, MD | Policy
    • Alex Pretti: a physician’s open letter defending his legacy

      Mousson Berrouet, DO | Physician
    • Why voicemail in outpatient care is failing patients and staff

      Dan Ouellet | Tech
  • Recent Posts

    • The necessity of getting lost to find yourself

      Michele Luckenbaugh | Conditions
    • Physician resilience: Why systems matter more than heroism

      Harvey Castro, MD, MBA | Tech
    • Medical bankruptcy: the hidden cost of U.S. health care

      Richard A. Lawhern, PhD | Conditions
    • Tobacco treatment neglect: Why 25 million smokers are left behind

      Edward Anselm, MD | Conditions
    • Music and brain plasticity: How sound rewires your mind

      Marc Arginteanu, MD | Conditions
    • Employer-sponsored DPC: Why private equity is winning the infrastructure race

      Dana Y. Lujan, MBA | Policy

Subscribe to KevinMD and never miss a story!

Get free updates delivered free to your inbox.


Find jobs at
Careers by KevinMD.com

Search thousands of physician, PA, NP, and CRNA jobs now.

Learn more

View 5 Comments >

Founded in 2004 by Kevin Pho, MD, KevinMD.com is the web’s leading platform where physicians, advanced practitioners, nurses, medical students, and patients share their insight and tell their stories.

Social

  • Like on Facebook
  • Follow on Twitter
  • Connect on Linkedin
  • Subscribe on Youtube
  • Instagram

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

  • Most Popular

  • Past Week

    • Why Medicare must cover atrial fibrillation screening to prevent strokes

      Radhesh K. Gupta | Conditions
    • My wife’s story: How DEA and CDC guidelines destroyed our golden years

      Monty Goddard & Richard A. Lawhern, PhD | Conditions
    • Why medical school DEI mission statements matter for future physicians

      Aditi Mahajan, MEd, Laura Malmut, MD, MEd, Jared Stowers, MD, and Khaleel Atkinson | Education
    • The American Board of Internal Medicine maintenance of certification lawsuit: What physicians need to know

      Brian Hudes, MD | Physician
    • Teaching joy transforms the future of medical practice [PODCAST]

      The Podcast by KevinMD | Podcast
    • The necessity of getting lost to find yourself

      Michele Luckenbaugh | Conditions
  • Past 6 Months

    • Will AI replace primary care physicians?

      P. Dileep Kumar, MD, MBA | Tech
    • A physician father on the Dobbs decision and reproductive rights

      Travis Walker, MD, MPH | Physician
    • What is the minority tax in medicine?

      Tharini Nagarkar and Maranda C. Ward, EdD, MPH | Education
    • Why the U.S. health care system is failing patients and physicians

      John C. Hagan III, MD | Policy
    • Alex Pretti: a physician’s open letter defending his legacy

      Mousson Berrouet, DO | Physician
    • Why voicemail in outpatient care is failing patients and staff

      Dan Ouellet | Tech
  • Recent Posts

    • The necessity of getting lost to find yourself

      Michele Luckenbaugh | Conditions
    • Physician resilience: Why systems matter more than heroism

      Harvey Castro, MD, MBA | Tech
    • Medical bankruptcy: the hidden cost of U.S. health care

      Richard A. Lawhern, PhD | Conditions
    • Tobacco treatment neglect: Why 25 million smokers are left behind

      Edward Anselm, MD | Conditions
    • Music and brain plasticity: How sound rewires your mind

      Marc Arginteanu, MD | Conditions
    • Employer-sponsored DPC: Why private equity is winning the infrastructure race

      Dana Y. Lujan, MBA | Policy

MedPage Today Professional

An Everyday Health Property Medpage Today

Copyright © 2026 KevinMD.com | Powered by Astra WordPress Theme

  • Terms of Use | Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA Policy
All Content © KevinMD, LLC
Site by Outthink Group

How scut work has changed for today’s generation of doctors
5 comments

Comments are moderated before they are published. Please read the comment policy.

Loading Comments...