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A ‘silent reminder’ within the EHR made a difference

 

The Choosing Wisely recommendations for hospitalists have launched numerous research projects. One dealing with telemetry and catheter use was published in September’s American Journal of Medicine.

After reviewing the literature on how people were implementing these recommendations, the researchers noticed most projects “1) narrowly focused on only one of the recommendations; 2) often used intrusive interventions that appeared to be burdensome and not adaptable to physician workflow; and 3) were expensive to implement,” said lead author Charlie M. Wray, DO, MS, of the Division of Hospital Medicine, San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center, and the University of California, San Francisco. “We set out to design a project that could minimize these aspects while hopefully decreasing the use of telemetry and Foley catheters.”

The researchers created a “silent” reminder that was posted on a widely used screen within their EHR and was only activated when the user clicked on it. “Additionally, we wanted to make sure that this intervention made its way to teaching rounds and the patients’ bedsides,” Dr. Wray said. “So, when the attendings and residents would print out their daily census, it would contain the reminders, which allowed the team to quickly review which patients were actively using telemetry or had a Foley and discuss, at a team-level, whose telemetry or Foley could be stopped.”

The project demonstrated a trend toward less telemetry use, less time spent on telemetry, fewer catheters ordered, and more selective utilization of catheters in sicker patients.

“We believe that our project shows that the bundling of interventions has the potential to impart an effect on a greater proportion of the population than those that focus on a single issue,” Dr. Wray said. “Second, future interventions that look to utilize EHR-based clinical reminders should consider utilizing a ‘silent’ design that is prominent but doesn’t intrude upon practitioners workflow.”

You don’t need to be at a large academic institution to implement this idea, he added. “A few hours with your IT expert and a champion who is willing to take the lead could easily implement this project and hopefully see similar outcomes.”
 

Reference

Wray, Charlie M. et al. Improving value by reducing unnecessary telemetry and urinary catheter utilization in hospitalized patients. Am J Med. 2017 Sep;130(9):1037-41.

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A ‘silent reminder’ within the EHR made a difference
A ‘silent reminder’ within the EHR made a difference

 

The Choosing Wisely recommendations for hospitalists have launched numerous research projects. One dealing with telemetry and catheter use was published in September’s American Journal of Medicine.

After reviewing the literature on how people were implementing these recommendations, the researchers noticed most projects “1) narrowly focused on only one of the recommendations; 2) often used intrusive interventions that appeared to be burdensome and not adaptable to physician workflow; and 3) were expensive to implement,” said lead author Charlie M. Wray, DO, MS, of the Division of Hospital Medicine, San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center, and the University of California, San Francisco. “We set out to design a project that could minimize these aspects while hopefully decreasing the use of telemetry and Foley catheters.”

The researchers created a “silent” reminder that was posted on a widely used screen within their EHR and was only activated when the user clicked on it. “Additionally, we wanted to make sure that this intervention made its way to teaching rounds and the patients’ bedsides,” Dr. Wray said. “So, when the attendings and residents would print out their daily census, it would contain the reminders, which allowed the team to quickly review which patients were actively using telemetry or had a Foley and discuss, at a team-level, whose telemetry or Foley could be stopped.”

The project demonstrated a trend toward less telemetry use, less time spent on telemetry, fewer catheters ordered, and more selective utilization of catheters in sicker patients.

“We believe that our project shows that the bundling of interventions has the potential to impart an effect on a greater proportion of the population than those that focus on a single issue,” Dr. Wray said. “Second, future interventions that look to utilize EHR-based clinical reminders should consider utilizing a ‘silent’ design that is prominent but doesn’t intrude upon practitioners workflow.”

You don’t need to be at a large academic institution to implement this idea, he added. “A few hours with your IT expert and a champion who is willing to take the lead could easily implement this project and hopefully see similar outcomes.”
 

Reference

Wray, Charlie M. et al. Improving value by reducing unnecessary telemetry and urinary catheter utilization in hospitalized patients. Am J Med. 2017 Sep;130(9):1037-41.

 

The Choosing Wisely recommendations for hospitalists have launched numerous research projects. One dealing with telemetry and catheter use was published in September’s American Journal of Medicine.

After reviewing the literature on how people were implementing these recommendations, the researchers noticed most projects “1) narrowly focused on only one of the recommendations; 2) often used intrusive interventions that appeared to be burdensome and not adaptable to physician workflow; and 3) were expensive to implement,” said lead author Charlie M. Wray, DO, MS, of the Division of Hospital Medicine, San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center, and the University of California, San Francisco. “We set out to design a project that could minimize these aspects while hopefully decreasing the use of telemetry and Foley catheters.”

The researchers created a “silent” reminder that was posted on a widely used screen within their EHR and was only activated when the user clicked on it. “Additionally, we wanted to make sure that this intervention made its way to teaching rounds and the patients’ bedsides,” Dr. Wray said. “So, when the attendings and residents would print out their daily census, it would contain the reminders, which allowed the team to quickly review which patients were actively using telemetry or had a Foley and discuss, at a team-level, whose telemetry or Foley could be stopped.”

The project demonstrated a trend toward less telemetry use, less time spent on telemetry, fewer catheters ordered, and more selective utilization of catheters in sicker patients.

“We believe that our project shows that the bundling of interventions has the potential to impart an effect on a greater proportion of the population than those that focus on a single issue,” Dr. Wray said. “Second, future interventions that look to utilize EHR-based clinical reminders should consider utilizing a ‘silent’ design that is prominent but doesn’t intrude upon practitioners workflow.”

You don’t need to be at a large academic institution to implement this idea, he added. “A few hours with your IT expert and a champion who is willing to take the lead could easily implement this project and hopefully see similar outcomes.”
 

Reference

Wray, Charlie M. et al. Improving value by reducing unnecessary telemetry and urinary catheter utilization in hospitalized patients. Am J Med. 2017 Sep;130(9):1037-41.

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