The effect of medication related clinical decision support at the time of physician order entry
Autor: | Ruud T.M. van der Hoeven, Thijs J. Giezen, Soufiane Lilih, Marieke Pereboom, Matthijs L. Becker, Fatih Baypinar, Hylke Jan Kingma |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Pharmacology
Hospital information system medicine.medical_specialty business.industry Pharmaceutical Science Pharmacy Toxicology medicine.disease 030226 pharmacology & pharmacy Clinical decision support system Order entry 03 medical and health sciences Folinic acid 0302 clinical medicine Emergency medicine Chi-square test Medicine Vancomycin Pharmacology (medical) 030212 general & internal medicine business Hyponatremia medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | International Journal of Clinical Pharmacy. 43:137-143 |
ISSN: | 2210-7711 2210-7703 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11096-020-01121-1 |
Popis: | Background In advanced clinical decision support systems, patient characteristics and laboratory values are included in the algorithms that generate alerts. These alerts have a higher specificity than basic medication surveillance alerts. The alerts of advanced clinical decision support systems can be shown directly to the prescriber during order entry, without the risk of generating an overload of irrelevant alerts. We implemented five advanced algorithms that are shown directly to the prescriber. These algorithms are for gastrointestinal prophylaxis, folic or folinic acid prescribed with orally or subcutaneously administered methotrexate, vitamin D prescribed with bisphosphonates, hyponatremia and measuring plasma levels for vancomycin and gentamicin. Objective We evaluated the effect of the implementation of the algorithms. Setting We performed prospective intervention studies with a historical group for comparison in both inpatients and outpatients at a teaching hospital in the Netherlands. Methods We compared the time period after implementation of the algorithm with the time period before implementation, using data from the hospital information system Epic. Difference in guideline adherence were analyzed using Chi square tests. Main outcome measure The outcome measures were the number of alerts, the acceptance rate of the advice in the alert, and for the algorithm measuring plasma levels for vancomycin and gentamicin the time to the correct dose. Results For all algorithms, the implementation resulted in a significant increase in guideline adherence, varying from 11 to 36%. The acceptance rate varied from 14% for hyponatremia to 90% for methotrexate. For gastrointestinal prophylaxis the acceptance rate was 4.4% for basic drug–drug interaction alerts when no gastrointestinal prophylaxis was prescribed and increased to 44.7% after implementation of the advanced algorithm. This algorithm substantially decreased the number of alerts from 812 before implementation to 217 after implementation. After implementation of the algorithm for measuring plasma levels for vancomycin and gentamicin, the proportion of patients receiving the correct dose after 48 h increased from 73 to 84% (p = 0.03). Conclusion Implementation of advanced algorithms that take patient characteristics into account and are shown directly to the physician during order entry, result in an increased guideline adherence. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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