Clinician Wellbeing

Clinician Burnout and the EHR: Causes & Solutions

Documentation burden is a top driver of physician and nurse burnout. Here’s the data, and how better software gives clinicians their time back.

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Clinician burnout — the emotional exhaustion and detachment that comes from chronic workplace stress — is now one of healthcare’s defining problems, and the electronic health record is squarely in the middle of it. Survey after survey names bureaucratic workload and EHR demands as the leading drivers, ahead of long hours or difficult cases.

The encouraging part: because documentation burden is a software problem, it responds to software fixes. Below is what the research shows and practical ways to reduce the burden — including how MedTec.ai does it. Explore the AI medical scribe or book a demo.

How does the EHR contribute to burnout?

The EHR drives burnout mainly through documentation burden: too many clicks and required fields, duplicative charting, and after-hours “pajama time” spent finishing notes. That constant low-grade friction adds cognitive load and eats into time with patients and time off. Reducing clicks, adopting ambient AI documentation, and finishing notes at the point of care are the most effective fixes.

The Data

Burnout by the Numbers

Physician and nurse burnout, and its link to documentation burden.

62%
of physicians report burnout — with bureaucratic workload and EHR demands the top two drivers.
Medscape
8+ hrs/wk
1 in 5 physicians (20.9%) spend this long on the EHR outside work hours — “pajama time.”
AMA
46% vs 21%
Nurse burnout with 3+ hours/week of unproductive charting vs. under one hour.
KLAS Arch Collaborative
4 in 5
acute-care nurses lose time to unproductive charting every week.
KLAS Arch Collaborative
40%
of nurses intend to leave the profession by 2029.
KLAS / HIT Consultant
51.9% → 38.8%
Clinician burnout after 30 days with an ambient AI scribe — the fix works.
JAMA Network Open

Sources: AMA, Medscape Physician Burnout Report, KLAS Arch Collaborative 2025, JAMA Network Open. Figures reflect specific surveys and definitions.

The Fix

How to Reduce EHR-Driven Burnout

  1. Cut the clicks. Streamline templates, order sets and workflows so common tasks take fewer screens.
  2. Bring in ambient AI documentation. An AI scribe drafts the note from the visit so clinicians stop typing through appointments — see the AI medical scribe.
  3. Finish notes at the point of care. Completing documentation during the visit eliminates after-hours “pajama time.”
  4. Trim duplicative fields and flowsheets. Every redundant required field is charting time and a reason to disengage.
  5. Give clinicians a say in configuration. KLAS data is clear: engaging bedside staff in EHR setup is the top lever for reducing burden.
  6. Measure documentation time, then act. Track charting and after-hours use and fix the worst offenders — one organization saved 32 minutes per nurse per day.
The Tools

How MedTec Cuts the Documentation Burden

AI Medical Assistant

Automates routine documentation and surfaces insights, so providers spend less time on the keyboard.

Explore AI Medical Assistant →

Speech-to-Text Notes

Dictate naturally; MedTec turns the conversation into a structured note in real time.

Explore Speech-to-Text Notes →

Clinical Documentation

Keyboard-friendly, specialty templates that cut clicks and note bloat.

Explore Clinical Documentation →
Further Reading

More on Burnout & EHR Usability

Is Your Staff Click-Fatigued?

How too many menus and clicks quietly drain your team.

Read the article →

Preventing Decision Fatigue

How smart, AI-assisted EHRs reduce cognitive load at the end of a long shift.

Read the article →

How Software Traps Your Best Staff

The hidden staffing cost of clunky systems — and what to look for instead.

Read the article →

The Modern Nurse’s Wishlist

Less screen time, more people time — what nurses actually want from their software.

Read the article →

You Don’t Need to Be a “Tech Person”

Why ease of use keeps clinicians from disengaging with the EHR.

Read the article →

Why the Screen During My Visit?

The documentation burden from the patient’s chair — and how AI changes it.

Read the article →
Got Questions?

Frequently Asked Questions

What causes clinician burnout?
Chronic workplace stress from heavy administrative and documentation demands, high patient volume and limited control over the day. In physician surveys, bureaucratic workload and EHR demands are consistently the top two drivers.
How does the EHR contribute to burnout?
Through documentation burden: excessive clicks and required fields, duplicative charting, and after-hours work to finish notes. This friction adds cognitive load and cuts into time with patients and time off.
How much time do clinicians spend on documentation after hours?
About 1 in 5 physicians (20.9%) spend more than eight hours per week on the EHR outside normal work hours, and nearly four in five acute-care nurses lose time to unproductive charting each week.
Can better software actually reduce burnout?
Yes. In a JAMA Network Open study, burnout fell from 51.9% to 38.8% within 30 days of adopting an ambient AI scribe, and streamlining charting has saved organizations around 32 minutes per nurse per day.
How does MedTec reduce documentation burden?
MedTec combines an AI Medical Assistant and real-time speech-to-text with keyboard-friendly clinical templates, so notes are drafted from the visit and clinicians spend less time on the keyboard.
Get Started
Give Your Clinicians Their Time Back

See how MedTec’s AI documentation and clean workflows cut the charting burden — book a demo or compare plans.

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