Medical admission order sets to improve deep vein thrombosis prophylaxis rates and other outcomes
2009; Wiley; Volume: 4; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1002/jhm.399
ISSN1553-5606
AutoresChris O’Connor, Neill K. J. Adhikari, Katharine DeCaire, Jan O. Friedrich,
Tópico(s)Healthcare cost, quality, practices
ResumoAbstract BACKGROUND: The value of order sets for clinical decision support has not been established. OBJECTIVE: To determine whether introduction of admission order sets increases the proportion of inpatients receiving deep venous thrombosis (DVT) prophylaxis. DESIGN: Before‐after study. SETTING: Community hospital. PATIENTS: General medical patients admitted to hospital. INTERVENTION: Paper‐based admission order sets (instead of free‐text orders) for voluntary use by internists, without any education or behavior change interventions. MEASUREMENTS: Primary outcome was proportion of medical admissions ordered DVT prophylaxis. Secondary outcomes included overall utilization of DVT prophylaxis in medical inpatients and other admission order care quality measures. RESULTS: Prior to introduction of order sets, DVT prophylaxis was ordered in 10.9% of patients. Patients admitted with order sets were more likely to be ordered DVT prophylaxis than patients admitted with free‐text orders (44.0% versus 20.6%, by months 14 and 15, P < 0.0001). Hospital‐wide DVT prophylaxis in medical inpatients increased from 12.8% to 25.8% of patient‐days ( P < 0.0001). Order set use improved many other secondary outcomes ( P < 0.05 for all), including allied health consultations (62.8% versus 12.7%), use of standardized diabetic diet (17.0% versus 5.1%), insulin sliding scale (19.1% versus 7.6%), potassium replacement protocol (63.8% versus 0.51%), documentation of allergies (54.3% versus 9.6%) and resuscitation status (57.4% versus 10.2%), and reduced orders for inappropriate laboratory tests such as blood urea nitrogen (39.4% versus 59.0%). CONCLUSIONS: The broad impact of order sets and minimal organizational resources required for their implementation suggests that order sets may have wide applicability as a clinical decision support tool. Journal of Hospital Medicine 2009;4:81–89. © 2009 Society of Hospital Medicine.
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