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s / Biol Blood Marrow Transplant 21 (2015) S355eS373 S357 Department (ED) electronic medical record (EMR) on time to antibiotic administration and other time-sensitive measures. We hypothesize that triage support will decrease time to vitals, blood cultures, antibiotics, and unit transfer. Methods: A before-after interventional study was conducted of all adult (age 18) patients with history of BMT and fever >37.1 C admitted from a 60,000-visit university ED with an active BMT program between October 2011 and July 2014. Cohorts were defined by implementation of a computerized triage support advisory in February 2013. This system was comprised of a best practice advisory (BPA) using both a computer prompt and an automated page to alert clinicians to the history of recent BMT. The primary outcome was time to antibiotics, and secondary outcomes included time to vital signs, blood cultures, and transfer. A one-sided Wilcoxon rank-sum test was used to compare before-after intervention times, and the Chi-squared test was used for comparisons of proportions. Statistical tests were assessed for significance at the 5% level. Results: Sixty-three patients were included in the study, and most had blood cultures drawn and antibiotics started empirically (87% and 86%, respectively). Median time to antibiotics was lower after BPA implementation (79 vs. 114 min, p |