The utilization of clinical decision support (CDS) is increasing among healthcare facilities which have implemented computerized physician order entry or electronic medical records. Formal prospective evaluation of CDS implementations occurs rarely, and misuse or flaws in system design are often unrecognized. Retrospective review can identify failures but is too late to make critical corrections or initiate redesign efforts. A real-time surveillance dashboard for high-alert medications integrates externalized CDS interactions with relevant medication ordering, administration, and therapeutic monitoring data. The surveillance view of the dashboard displays all currently admitted, eligible patients and provides brief demographics with triggering order, laboratory, and CDS failure data to allow prioritization of high-risk scenarios. The patient detail view displays a detailed timeline of orders, order administrations, laboratory values, and CDS interactions for an individual patient and allows users to understand provider actions and patient condition changes occurring in conjunction with CDS failures. Clinical pharmacists' use of the dashboard for patient monitoring and intervention aims to increase the rate and timeliness of intercepted medication errors compared to CPOE-based CDS in the setting of acute kidney injury, which affects patients at various points across all hospital units and services and has numerous opportunities for intervention.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
540
Clinical pharmacist reviews patients on dashboard and makes intervention with providing team when necessary.
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Nashville, Tennessee, United States
Adverse Drug Events or Potential Adverse Drug Events
Our primary outcome measured the rate of AKI-related ADEs and pADEs. We defined pADEs as incidents with the potential for injury related to a drug, such as use of a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug for at least 24 hours, and ADEs as injuries resulting from the administration of a drug, such as a toxic vancomycin trough level or a bleed after administration of enoxaparin. We measured outcomes after completion of the inpatient encounter (either by death or discharge); pADEs or ADEs occurring after patient discharge were not included in the analysis.
Time frame: Until patient discharge (~2 week average)
Time to Provider Response
Time from study event to modification or discontinuation of targeted medication
Time frame: Until patient discharge (~2 week average)
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.