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What Hospitalists Can Really Learn from Aviation

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What Hospitalists Can Really Learn from Aviation

The aviation safety model is often discussed in a healthcare context but in a way that may miss the most important points, a new article in BMJ Quality & Safety suggests.

The article, “Learning from Near Misses in Aviation: So Much More to It Than You Thought” by Robert Wears, MD, PhD, MS, of University of Florida’s Department of Emergency Medicine, suggests healthcare still has important lessons to learn from aviation. The article focuses on a book called Close Calls: Managing Risk and Resilience in Airline Flight Safety by Carl Macrae.

“Although the book itself is about airlines, it has important lessons for improving safety in healthcare, especially with respect to management of incidents or ‘near misses,’” Dr. Wears writes. “Its rich descriptions and detailed explanation of the practical, everyday work of flight safety investigators should be required reading for anyone interested in patient safety. It will destroy many of the myths and misconceptions about reporting systems and learning from incidents that have caused us to expend so much effort for such meager results; it will also overturn the normative model of safety prevalent in healthcare.”

Dr. Wears says he wanted to write the article for two reasons.

“First, the patient safety orthodoxy has been obsessed with systems for reporting incidents, accidents, hazards, general ‘hiccups’ in clinical work for years, but almost nothing of value has come from this effort despite frequent badgering of physicians to report more,” he says. “Second, mainstream patient safety has also been enamored of the aviation safety model, but its ideas about how aviation safety is actually accomplished are naive and simplistic.”

He emphasizes that patient safety efforts to date have focused on the wrong things: too much on acquiring and storing reports and too little on analyzing them to develop an understanding of the systems in which hazards to patients arise.

“Making sense of incidents is far more important than classifying, counting, or trending them,” Dr. Wears says.

Hospitalists are on the front line of these issues, of course.

“Hospitalists regularly encounter hazards to patients in their daily work and, for the most part, successfully manage to mitigate or work around them, but the hazards remain in the system, only to pop up again sometime later. … A rich description of how a successful and effective safety reporting and analysis effort really works—not how we imagine it to work—could help us exchange our current wasteful and ineffective approach for something better,” he says.

Reference

  1. Wears R. Learning from near misses in aviation: so much more to it than you thought [published online ahead of print September 1, 2016]. BMJ Qual Saf. doi:10.1136/bmjqs-2016-005990.
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The aviation safety model is often discussed in a healthcare context but in a way that may miss the most important points, a new article in BMJ Quality & Safety suggests.

The article, “Learning from Near Misses in Aviation: So Much More to It Than You Thought” by Robert Wears, MD, PhD, MS, of University of Florida’s Department of Emergency Medicine, suggests healthcare still has important lessons to learn from aviation. The article focuses on a book called Close Calls: Managing Risk and Resilience in Airline Flight Safety by Carl Macrae.

“Although the book itself is about airlines, it has important lessons for improving safety in healthcare, especially with respect to management of incidents or ‘near misses,’” Dr. Wears writes. “Its rich descriptions and detailed explanation of the practical, everyday work of flight safety investigators should be required reading for anyone interested in patient safety. It will destroy many of the myths and misconceptions about reporting systems and learning from incidents that have caused us to expend so much effort for such meager results; it will also overturn the normative model of safety prevalent in healthcare.”

Dr. Wears says he wanted to write the article for two reasons.

“First, the patient safety orthodoxy has been obsessed with systems for reporting incidents, accidents, hazards, general ‘hiccups’ in clinical work for years, but almost nothing of value has come from this effort despite frequent badgering of physicians to report more,” he says. “Second, mainstream patient safety has also been enamored of the aviation safety model, but its ideas about how aviation safety is actually accomplished are naive and simplistic.”

He emphasizes that patient safety efforts to date have focused on the wrong things: too much on acquiring and storing reports and too little on analyzing them to develop an understanding of the systems in which hazards to patients arise.

“Making sense of incidents is far more important than classifying, counting, or trending them,” Dr. Wears says.

Hospitalists are on the front line of these issues, of course.

“Hospitalists regularly encounter hazards to patients in their daily work and, for the most part, successfully manage to mitigate or work around them, but the hazards remain in the system, only to pop up again sometime later. … A rich description of how a successful and effective safety reporting and analysis effort really works—not how we imagine it to work—could help us exchange our current wasteful and ineffective approach for something better,” he says.

Reference

  1. Wears R. Learning from near misses in aviation: so much more to it than you thought [published online ahead of print September 1, 2016]. BMJ Qual Saf. doi:10.1136/bmjqs-2016-005990.

The aviation safety model is often discussed in a healthcare context but in a way that may miss the most important points, a new article in BMJ Quality & Safety suggests.

The article, “Learning from Near Misses in Aviation: So Much More to It Than You Thought” by Robert Wears, MD, PhD, MS, of University of Florida’s Department of Emergency Medicine, suggests healthcare still has important lessons to learn from aviation. The article focuses on a book called Close Calls: Managing Risk and Resilience in Airline Flight Safety by Carl Macrae.

“Although the book itself is about airlines, it has important lessons for improving safety in healthcare, especially with respect to management of incidents or ‘near misses,’” Dr. Wears writes. “Its rich descriptions and detailed explanation of the practical, everyday work of flight safety investigators should be required reading for anyone interested in patient safety. It will destroy many of the myths and misconceptions about reporting systems and learning from incidents that have caused us to expend so much effort for such meager results; it will also overturn the normative model of safety prevalent in healthcare.”

Dr. Wears says he wanted to write the article for two reasons.

“First, the patient safety orthodoxy has been obsessed with systems for reporting incidents, accidents, hazards, general ‘hiccups’ in clinical work for years, but almost nothing of value has come from this effort despite frequent badgering of physicians to report more,” he says. “Second, mainstream patient safety has also been enamored of the aviation safety model, but its ideas about how aviation safety is actually accomplished are naive and simplistic.”

He emphasizes that patient safety efforts to date have focused on the wrong things: too much on acquiring and storing reports and too little on analyzing them to develop an understanding of the systems in which hazards to patients arise.

“Making sense of incidents is far more important than classifying, counting, or trending them,” Dr. Wears says.

Hospitalists are on the front line of these issues, of course.

“Hospitalists regularly encounter hazards to patients in their daily work and, for the most part, successfully manage to mitigate or work around them, but the hazards remain in the system, only to pop up again sometime later. … A rich description of how a successful and effective safety reporting and analysis effort really works—not how we imagine it to work—could help us exchange our current wasteful and ineffective approach for something better,” he says.

Reference

  1. Wears R. Learning from near misses in aviation: so much more to it than you thought [published online ahead of print September 1, 2016]. BMJ Qual Saf. doi:10.1136/bmjqs-2016-005990.
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Educating Patients about Sleep Tools

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One of the biggest complaints of hospital patients today is poor sleep, which is not conducive to healing or good health in general.

“The reason I’m interested, as a cardiologist, is that sleep disorders are associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular mortality,” says Peter M. Farrehi, MD, assistant professor of internal medicine at the University of Michigan and lead author of a recent sleep study published in The American Journal of Medicine.

Most information about sleeping in the hospital comes from ICU studies, he says.

Dr. Farrehi wanted to actually test an intervention rather than simply survey patients. All patients received an eye mask, ear plugs, and a white-noise machine, then were randomized to receive an education-based script on the importance of using these sleep-enhancing tools or a discussion about the general benefits of sleep.

“To avoid bias in the study both from the research staff and also hospital staff, I didn't want only the intervention to have the tools,” he says. “This was a double-blind, randomized control trial in the hospital, which is really unusual.”

Patients in the group that was taught about the sleep-enhancing tools had a statistically significant difference in their perceptions of fatigue and a trend toward improving their sleep and wake disturbances.

Dr. Farrehi suggests hospitalists talk to their patients complaining of poor sleep about these sleep tools. If they are not available in their hospital, hospitalists might refer their medical director to this paper to see if there is any interest in purchasing these sleep tools.

Reference

  1. 1. Farrehi PM, Clore KR, Scott JR, Vanini G, Clauw DJ. Efficacy of sleep tool education during hospitalization: a randomized controlled trial [published online ahead of print August 23, 2016]. Am J Med. doi:10.1016/j.amjmed.2016.08.001.
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One of the biggest complaints of hospital patients today is poor sleep, which is not conducive to healing or good health in general.

“The reason I’m interested, as a cardiologist, is that sleep disorders are associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular mortality,” says Peter M. Farrehi, MD, assistant professor of internal medicine at the University of Michigan and lead author of a recent sleep study published in The American Journal of Medicine.

Most information about sleeping in the hospital comes from ICU studies, he says.

Dr. Farrehi wanted to actually test an intervention rather than simply survey patients. All patients received an eye mask, ear plugs, and a white-noise machine, then were randomized to receive an education-based script on the importance of using these sleep-enhancing tools or a discussion about the general benefits of sleep.

“To avoid bias in the study both from the research staff and also hospital staff, I didn't want only the intervention to have the tools,” he says. “This was a double-blind, randomized control trial in the hospital, which is really unusual.”

Patients in the group that was taught about the sleep-enhancing tools had a statistically significant difference in their perceptions of fatigue and a trend toward improving their sleep and wake disturbances.

Dr. Farrehi suggests hospitalists talk to their patients complaining of poor sleep about these sleep tools. If they are not available in their hospital, hospitalists might refer their medical director to this paper to see if there is any interest in purchasing these sleep tools.

Reference

  1. 1. Farrehi PM, Clore KR, Scott JR, Vanini G, Clauw DJ. Efficacy of sleep tool education during hospitalization: a randomized controlled trial [published online ahead of print August 23, 2016]. Am J Med. doi:10.1016/j.amjmed.2016.08.001.

One of the biggest complaints of hospital patients today is poor sleep, which is not conducive to healing or good health in general.

“The reason I’m interested, as a cardiologist, is that sleep disorders are associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular mortality,” says Peter M. Farrehi, MD, assistant professor of internal medicine at the University of Michigan and lead author of a recent sleep study published in The American Journal of Medicine.

Most information about sleeping in the hospital comes from ICU studies, he says.

Dr. Farrehi wanted to actually test an intervention rather than simply survey patients. All patients received an eye mask, ear plugs, and a white-noise machine, then were randomized to receive an education-based script on the importance of using these sleep-enhancing tools or a discussion about the general benefits of sleep.

“To avoid bias in the study both from the research staff and also hospital staff, I didn't want only the intervention to have the tools,” he says. “This was a double-blind, randomized control trial in the hospital, which is really unusual.”

Patients in the group that was taught about the sleep-enhancing tools had a statistically significant difference in their perceptions of fatigue and a trend toward improving their sleep and wake disturbances.

Dr. Farrehi suggests hospitalists talk to their patients complaining of poor sleep about these sleep tools. If they are not available in their hospital, hospitalists might refer their medical director to this paper to see if there is any interest in purchasing these sleep tools.

Reference

  1. 1. Farrehi PM, Clore KR, Scott JR, Vanini G, Clauw DJ. Efficacy of sleep tool education during hospitalization: a randomized controlled trial [published online ahead of print August 23, 2016]. Am J Med. doi:10.1016/j.amjmed.2016.08.001.
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Addressing Hospitalist Burnout with Mindfulness

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As compared with the general population, hospitalists are especially prone to stress and burnout, according to an abstract published in the Journal of Hospital Medicine.

The study’s scoring showed that hospitalists started with higher levels of perceived stress than the general population of adults of similar ages. Among hospitalists who attended an average of two mindfulness sessions over five weeks, there was a statistically significant increase in mindfulness and a decrease in perceived stress.

Image Credit: Shuttershock.com

The low number of participants, seven hospitalists, makes extrapolation difficult, but the results are suggestive.

“Even with those seven people, we did see there was a significant difference in their stress and an increase in their mindfulness, which I thought was kind of impressive just for going to only two or three sessions,” says study co-author Dennis Chang, MD, of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. “I think the biggest thing that I would like to see is if it actually improves how we take care of our patients, not just ourselves.”

Dr. Chang says one factor that inspired the study was a hospital survey.

“We do an annual survey of our hospitalists, and it seemed that we had, as a lot of hospital groups do, a burnout problem: People were feeling a little bit burnt out,” Dr. Chang says. “We read some articles on mindfulness, and we thought it might be interesting to see if it would help our hospital.”

Starting this Fall, Mount Sinai will offer a tailored mindfulness session for providers.

“We’re hoping we’ll see if these results really stand up,” Dr. Chang says.

He encourages hospitalists to learn more about mindfulness and to realize that small changes can have an impact.

“Even doing some breathing exercises for a couple of minutes a day can actually make a big difference,” he says. “It doesn’t take a lot of time. Maybe even going to one mindfulness session can give you some tools that you can use. It can make a huge difference in your stress levels and how you take care of patients.”

Reference

  1. Chablani S, Nguyen VT, Chang D. Mindfulness for hospitalists: a pilot study investigating the effect of a mindfulness initiative on mindfulness and perceived stress among hospitalists [abstract]. J Hosp Med. 2016;11(suppl 1). Accessed September 9, 2016.
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As compared with the general population, hospitalists are especially prone to stress and burnout, according to an abstract published in the Journal of Hospital Medicine.

The study’s scoring showed that hospitalists started with higher levels of perceived stress than the general population of adults of similar ages. Among hospitalists who attended an average of two mindfulness sessions over five weeks, there was a statistically significant increase in mindfulness and a decrease in perceived stress.

Image Credit: Shuttershock.com

The low number of participants, seven hospitalists, makes extrapolation difficult, but the results are suggestive.

“Even with those seven people, we did see there was a significant difference in their stress and an increase in their mindfulness, which I thought was kind of impressive just for going to only two or three sessions,” says study co-author Dennis Chang, MD, of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. “I think the biggest thing that I would like to see is if it actually improves how we take care of our patients, not just ourselves.”

Dr. Chang says one factor that inspired the study was a hospital survey.

“We do an annual survey of our hospitalists, and it seemed that we had, as a lot of hospital groups do, a burnout problem: People were feeling a little bit burnt out,” Dr. Chang says. “We read some articles on mindfulness, and we thought it might be interesting to see if it would help our hospital.”

Starting this Fall, Mount Sinai will offer a tailored mindfulness session for providers.

“We’re hoping we’ll see if these results really stand up,” Dr. Chang says.

He encourages hospitalists to learn more about mindfulness and to realize that small changes can have an impact.

“Even doing some breathing exercises for a couple of minutes a day can actually make a big difference,” he says. “It doesn’t take a lot of time. Maybe even going to one mindfulness session can give you some tools that you can use. It can make a huge difference in your stress levels and how you take care of patients.”

Reference

  1. Chablani S, Nguyen VT, Chang D. Mindfulness for hospitalists: a pilot study investigating the effect of a mindfulness initiative on mindfulness and perceived stress among hospitalists [abstract]. J Hosp Med. 2016;11(suppl 1). Accessed September 9, 2016.

As compared with the general population, hospitalists are especially prone to stress and burnout, according to an abstract published in the Journal of Hospital Medicine.

The study’s scoring showed that hospitalists started with higher levels of perceived stress than the general population of adults of similar ages. Among hospitalists who attended an average of two mindfulness sessions over five weeks, there was a statistically significant increase in mindfulness and a decrease in perceived stress.

Image Credit: Shuttershock.com

The low number of participants, seven hospitalists, makes extrapolation difficult, but the results are suggestive.

“Even with those seven people, we did see there was a significant difference in their stress and an increase in their mindfulness, which I thought was kind of impressive just for going to only two or three sessions,” says study co-author Dennis Chang, MD, of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. “I think the biggest thing that I would like to see is if it actually improves how we take care of our patients, not just ourselves.”

Dr. Chang says one factor that inspired the study was a hospital survey.

“We do an annual survey of our hospitalists, and it seemed that we had, as a lot of hospital groups do, a burnout problem: People were feeling a little bit burnt out,” Dr. Chang says. “We read some articles on mindfulness, and we thought it might be interesting to see if it would help our hospital.”

Starting this Fall, Mount Sinai will offer a tailored mindfulness session for providers.

“We’re hoping we’ll see if these results really stand up,” Dr. Chang says.

He encourages hospitalists to learn more about mindfulness and to realize that small changes can have an impact.

“Even doing some breathing exercises for a couple of minutes a day can actually make a big difference,” he says. “It doesn’t take a lot of time. Maybe even going to one mindfulness session can give you some tools that you can use. It can make a huge difference in your stress levels and how you take care of patients.”

Reference

  1. Chablani S, Nguyen VT, Chang D. Mindfulness for hospitalists: a pilot study investigating the effect of a mindfulness initiative on mindfulness and perceived stress among hospitalists [abstract]. J Hosp Med. 2016;11(suppl 1). Accessed September 9, 2016.
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Wartime Lessons Inform Civilian Medicine

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Recent wars have led to innovations in military trauma care that can be applied to civilians, say the authors of a JAMA Viewpoint published in June.1

Image Credit: Shuttershock.com

During the Afghanistan and Iraq wars, the percentage of wounded soldiers who died as a result of their injuries reached its lowest point in recorded history, writes lead author Donald M. Berwick, MD, MPP, of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement in Cambridge, Mass., along with colleagues from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine in Washington, D.C.

“Effective bleeding-control measures, improved resuscitation techniques, and aggressive neurocritical care interventions are among many advances that saved lives on the battlefield that otherwise would have been lost,” they write.

The reduction in injury-related deaths is in part due to the Military Health System and its Joint Trauma System embracing a culture of continuous performance improvement and an agile approach, a model called “focused empiricism,” the authors say. A new report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine clarifies the components of such a learning health system, which can also be applied to civilian care:

  • Leadership and a culture of learning: “A learning health system must be stewarded by leadership committed to nurturing a culture of continuous learning and improvement. ... Such a system should unite military and civilian trauma care leaders around a common, core aim established at the highest level in the nation; namely, to achieve zero preventable deaths after injury and minimize trauma-related disability.”
  • Transparency and incentives for quality trauma care: “Trauma care practitioners at all levels, including trauma surgeons and other physicians, nurses, technicians, and prehospital care personnel, should have access to data on their performance relative to that of their peers.”
  • Systems for ensuring an expert trauma care workforce: “A joint, integrated network of military and civilian trauma centers should be created as a training platform to prepare and sustain an expert workforce and to promote the translation of best practices between sectors.”

The progress made by the military’s trauma system could be lost, the writers conclude, without concerted efforts to disseminate and maintain the advances. The authors note that in the United States, there are nearly 150,000 deaths from trauma each year, and injury is the third-leading cause of death.

The “hundreds of thousands of civilians who have sustained trauma deserve the benefits of care improvements achieved in military medicine,” they conclude.

Reference

  1. Berwick DM, Downey AS, Cornett EA. A national trauma care system to achieve zero preventable deaths after injury: recommendations from a National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine report [published online ahead of print June 17, 2006]. JAMA. doi:10.1001/jama.2016.8524.

Quick Byte

Rating RTLS Options

The healthcare industry typically uses real-time location systems (RTLS) to help improve care quality, workflow efficiency, and bottom lines, according to a recent article in HealthcareITNews. The research firm KLAS rated 11 RTLS vendors and gave Centrak the highest overall performance score, beating competitors including AwarePoint, Cerner, GE Healthcare, and Intelligent Insights.

Reference

  1. Siwicki B. KLAS ranks real-time location systems from AwarePoint, Cerner, CenTrak, Versus and others. HealthcareITNews website. Accessed July 13, 2016.
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Recent wars have led to innovations in military trauma care that can be applied to civilians, say the authors of a JAMA Viewpoint published in June.1

Image Credit: Shuttershock.com

During the Afghanistan and Iraq wars, the percentage of wounded soldiers who died as a result of their injuries reached its lowest point in recorded history, writes lead author Donald M. Berwick, MD, MPP, of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement in Cambridge, Mass., along with colleagues from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine in Washington, D.C.

“Effective bleeding-control measures, improved resuscitation techniques, and aggressive neurocritical care interventions are among many advances that saved lives on the battlefield that otherwise would have been lost,” they write.

The reduction in injury-related deaths is in part due to the Military Health System and its Joint Trauma System embracing a culture of continuous performance improvement and an agile approach, a model called “focused empiricism,” the authors say. A new report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine clarifies the components of such a learning health system, which can also be applied to civilian care:

  • Leadership and a culture of learning: “A learning health system must be stewarded by leadership committed to nurturing a culture of continuous learning and improvement. ... Such a system should unite military and civilian trauma care leaders around a common, core aim established at the highest level in the nation; namely, to achieve zero preventable deaths after injury and minimize trauma-related disability.”
  • Transparency and incentives for quality trauma care: “Trauma care practitioners at all levels, including trauma surgeons and other physicians, nurses, technicians, and prehospital care personnel, should have access to data on their performance relative to that of their peers.”
  • Systems for ensuring an expert trauma care workforce: “A joint, integrated network of military and civilian trauma centers should be created as a training platform to prepare and sustain an expert workforce and to promote the translation of best practices between sectors.”

The progress made by the military’s trauma system could be lost, the writers conclude, without concerted efforts to disseminate and maintain the advances. The authors note that in the United States, there are nearly 150,000 deaths from trauma each year, and injury is the third-leading cause of death.

The “hundreds of thousands of civilians who have sustained trauma deserve the benefits of care improvements achieved in military medicine,” they conclude.

Reference

  1. Berwick DM, Downey AS, Cornett EA. A national trauma care system to achieve zero preventable deaths after injury: recommendations from a National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine report [published online ahead of print June 17, 2006]. JAMA. doi:10.1001/jama.2016.8524.

Quick Byte

Rating RTLS Options

The healthcare industry typically uses real-time location systems (RTLS) to help improve care quality, workflow efficiency, and bottom lines, according to a recent article in HealthcareITNews. The research firm KLAS rated 11 RTLS vendors and gave Centrak the highest overall performance score, beating competitors including AwarePoint, Cerner, GE Healthcare, and Intelligent Insights.

Reference

  1. Siwicki B. KLAS ranks real-time location systems from AwarePoint, Cerner, CenTrak, Versus and others. HealthcareITNews website. Accessed July 13, 2016.

Recent wars have led to innovations in military trauma care that can be applied to civilians, say the authors of a JAMA Viewpoint published in June.1

Image Credit: Shuttershock.com

During the Afghanistan and Iraq wars, the percentage of wounded soldiers who died as a result of their injuries reached its lowest point in recorded history, writes lead author Donald M. Berwick, MD, MPP, of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement in Cambridge, Mass., along with colleagues from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine in Washington, D.C.

“Effective bleeding-control measures, improved resuscitation techniques, and aggressive neurocritical care interventions are among many advances that saved lives on the battlefield that otherwise would have been lost,” they write.

The reduction in injury-related deaths is in part due to the Military Health System and its Joint Trauma System embracing a culture of continuous performance improvement and an agile approach, a model called “focused empiricism,” the authors say. A new report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine clarifies the components of such a learning health system, which can also be applied to civilian care:

  • Leadership and a culture of learning: “A learning health system must be stewarded by leadership committed to nurturing a culture of continuous learning and improvement. ... Such a system should unite military and civilian trauma care leaders around a common, core aim established at the highest level in the nation; namely, to achieve zero preventable deaths after injury and minimize trauma-related disability.”
  • Transparency and incentives for quality trauma care: “Trauma care practitioners at all levels, including trauma surgeons and other physicians, nurses, technicians, and prehospital care personnel, should have access to data on their performance relative to that of their peers.”
  • Systems for ensuring an expert trauma care workforce: “A joint, integrated network of military and civilian trauma centers should be created as a training platform to prepare and sustain an expert workforce and to promote the translation of best practices between sectors.”

The progress made by the military’s trauma system could be lost, the writers conclude, without concerted efforts to disseminate and maintain the advances. The authors note that in the United States, there are nearly 150,000 deaths from trauma each year, and injury is the third-leading cause of death.

The “hundreds of thousands of civilians who have sustained trauma deserve the benefits of care improvements achieved in military medicine,” they conclude.

Reference

  1. Berwick DM, Downey AS, Cornett EA. A national trauma care system to achieve zero preventable deaths after injury: recommendations from a National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine report [published online ahead of print June 17, 2006]. JAMA. doi:10.1001/jama.2016.8524.

Quick Byte

Rating RTLS Options

The healthcare industry typically uses real-time location systems (RTLS) to help improve care quality, workflow efficiency, and bottom lines, according to a recent article in HealthcareITNews. The research firm KLAS rated 11 RTLS vendors and gave Centrak the highest overall performance score, beating competitors including AwarePoint, Cerner, GE Healthcare, and Intelligent Insights.

Reference

  1. Siwicki B. KLAS ranks real-time location systems from AwarePoint, Cerner, CenTrak, Versus and others. HealthcareITNews website. Accessed July 13, 2016.
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Spreading Innovation among Hospitalists

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As part of an emerging and rapidly growing specialty, academic hospitalists face unique challenges in career advancement. Key mentoring needs, especially developing reputation and relationships outside of their institution, often pose a challenge and were the inspiration for a new paper published in the Journal of Hospital Medicine.

“Increasingly, we are not having faculty who are going up for promotion and reliably running into challenges around mentorship, national reputation, and having a network outside of their local hospital that is critical for advancement,” says lead author Ethan Cumbler, MD, FHM, FACP, of the Department of Medicine at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. “Hospital medicine as a movement is built on a foundation of innovation, and so as a specialty, we have a mandate to not only innovate but to disseminate those innovations.”

The model of the visiting professorship described in the paper takes midcareer academic hospitalists and provides an infrastructure for reciprocal faculty exchanges. This provides a forum to increase professional networks.

“We found that both junior faculty and our visiting professors saw value in advancing those goals,” Dr. Cumbler says. “We also saw evidence of the spread of ideas and new shared scholarship derived from having these reciprocal visits.”

This has model relevance for nonacademic hospitals, too. For example, it’d be useful for hospital medicine groups to share ideas with one another, Dr. Cumbler says.

“This is a simple structure, but it’s just like a small pebble thrown into a large body of water can create ripples which affect distant shores—sometimes it’s very simple concepts that are worth pursuing,” he says.

Reference

  1. Cumbler E, Herzke C, Smalligan R, Glasheen JJ, O’Malley C, Pierce JR Jr. Visiting professorship in hospital medicine: an innovative twist for a growing specialty [published online ahead of print June 23, 2016]. J Hosp Med. doi:10.1002/jhm.2625.
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As part of an emerging and rapidly growing specialty, academic hospitalists face unique challenges in career advancement. Key mentoring needs, especially developing reputation and relationships outside of their institution, often pose a challenge and were the inspiration for a new paper published in the Journal of Hospital Medicine.

“Increasingly, we are not having faculty who are going up for promotion and reliably running into challenges around mentorship, national reputation, and having a network outside of their local hospital that is critical for advancement,” says lead author Ethan Cumbler, MD, FHM, FACP, of the Department of Medicine at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. “Hospital medicine as a movement is built on a foundation of innovation, and so as a specialty, we have a mandate to not only innovate but to disseminate those innovations.”

The model of the visiting professorship described in the paper takes midcareer academic hospitalists and provides an infrastructure for reciprocal faculty exchanges. This provides a forum to increase professional networks.

“We found that both junior faculty and our visiting professors saw value in advancing those goals,” Dr. Cumbler says. “We also saw evidence of the spread of ideas and new shared scholarship derived from having these reciprocal visits.”

This has model relevance for nonacademic hospitals, too. For example, it’d be useful for hospital medicine groups to share ideas with one another, Dr. Cumbler says.

“This is a simple structure, but it’s just like a small pebble thrown into a large body of water can create ripples which affect distant shores—sometimes it’s very simple concepts that are worth pursuing,” he says.

Reference

  1. Cumbler E, Herzke C, Smalligan R, Glasheen JJ, O’Malley C, Pierce JR Jr. Visiting professorship in hospital medicine: an innovative twist for a growing specialty [published online ahead of print June 23, 2016]. J Hosp Med. doi:10.1002/jhm.2625.

As part of an emerging and rapidly growing specialty, academic hospitalists face unique challenges in career advancement. Key mentoring needs, especially developing reputation and relationships outside of their institution, often pose a challenge and were the inspiration for a new paper published in the Journal of Hospital Medicine.

“Increasingly, we are not having faculty who are going up for promotion and reliably running into challenges around mentorship, national reputation, and having a network outside of their local hospital that is critical for advancement,” says lead author Ethan Cumbler, MD, FHM, FACP, of the Department of Medicine at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. “Hospital medicine as a movement is built on a foundation of innovation, and so as a specialty, we have a mandate to not only innovate but to disseminate those innovations.”

The model of the visiting professorship described in the paper takes midcareer academic hospitalists and provides an infrastructure for reciprocal faculty exchanges. This provides a forum to increase professional networks.

“We found that both junior faculty and our visiting professors saw value in advancing those goals,” Dr. Cumbler says. “We also saw evidence of the spread of ideas and new shared scholarship derived from having these reciprocal visits.”

This has model relevance for nonacademic hospitals, too. For example, it’d be useful for hospital medicine groups to share ideas with one another, Dr. Cumbler says.

“This is a simple structure, but it’s just like a small pebble thrown into a large body of water can create ripples which affect distant shores—sometimes it’s very simple concepts that are worth pursuing,” he says.

Reference

  1. Cumbler E, Herzke C, Smalligan R, Glasheen JJ, O’Malley C, Pierce JR Jr. Visiting professorship in hospital medicine: an innovative twist for a growing specialty [published online ahead of print June 23, 2016]. J Hosp Med. doi:10.1002/jhm.2625.
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Working Towards Fewer Delirium Cases

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Delirium may be preventable among the elderly population, according to an abstract presented at the 2016 SHM annual meeting.1

The development of delirium involves an interrelationship between predisposing factors and precipitating factors in vulnerable patients. In 2015, a pilot project was conducted at Guthrie Robert Packer Hospital in Sayre, Penn., that included post-orthopedic surgery patients 60 years of age and older and patients with dementia at baseline cognitive function on admission.

The focus was on managing five risk factors: cognitive impairment, sleep deprivation, immobility, visual/hearing impairment, and medications. The nurses and residents caring for the patients were educated about methods that were proven to decrease the incidence of delirium. These include:

  • Using clocks and blinds to help restore circadian balance
  • Encouraging cognitive stimulation and regular visits from family and friends
  • Facilitating physiologic sleep with avoidance of interruption during sleeping hours
  • Initiating early mobilization and minimizing use of physical restraints

The result? In the pre-intervention group, 48% of the patients were found to have delirium with different precipitating factors. In the post-intervention group, the incidence decreased to 26.9%.

“This project was undertaken to increase the awareness of a non-costly, easy, and available intervention to prevent delirium,” says lead author Marcelle Meseeha, MD, a hospitalist at Guthrie Robert Packer Hospital. “Post-intervention study showed that the incidence of delirium has significantly decreased applying simple interventions. These familiar practices should be a mandatory process or a reminder in electronic health records. Also, education of providers and nursing staff must be an ongoing process. This will help reduce the incidence of delirium with its deleterious sequelae.” TH

Reference

  1. Meseeha M, Attia M. Ways to reduce incidence of hospital ward-acquired delirium; a quality improvement project [abstract]. J Hosp Med. 2016;11(suppl 1). Accessed July 18, 2016.
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Delirium may be preventable among the elderly population, according to an abstract presented at the 2016 SHM annual meeting.1

The development of delirium involves an interrelationship between predisposing factors and precipitating factors in vulnerable patients. In 2015, a pilot project was conducted at Guthrie Robert Packer Hospital in Sayre, Penn., that included post-orthopedic surgery patients 60 years of age and older and patients with dementia at baseline cognitive function on admission.

The focus was on managing five risk factors: cognitive impairment, sleep deprivation, immobility, visual/hearing impairment, and medications. The nurses and residents caring for the patients were educated about methods that were proven to decrease the incidence of delirium. These include:

  • Using clocks and blinds to help restore circadian balance
  • Encouraging cognitive stimulation and regular visits from family and friends
  • Facilitating physiologic sleep with avoidance of interruption during sleeping hours
  • Initiating early mobilization and minimizing use of physical restraints

The result? In the pre-intervention group, 48% of the patients were found to have delirium with different precipitating factors. In the post-intervention group, the incidence decreased to 26.9%.

“This project was undertaken to increase the awareness of a non-costly, easy, and available intervention to prevent delirium,” says lead author Marcelle Meseeha, MD, a hospitalist at Guthrie Robert Packer Hospital. “Post-intervention study showed that the incidence of delirium has significantly decreased applying simple interventions. These familiar practices should be a mandatory process or a reminder in electronic health records. Also, education of providers and nursing staff must be an ongoing process. This will help reduce the incidence of delirium with its deleterious sequelae.” TH

Reference

  1. Meseeha M, Attia M. Ways to reduce incidence of hospital ward-acquired delirium; a quality improvement project [abstract]. J Hosp Med. 2016;11(suppl 1). Accessed July 18, 2016.

Delirium may be preventable among the elderly population, according to an abstract presented at the 2016 SHM annual meeting.1

The development of delirium involves an interrelationship between predisposing factors and precipitating factors in vulnerable patients. In 2015, a pilot project was conducted at Guthrie Robert Packer Hospital in Sayre, Penn., that included post-orthopedic surgery patients 60 years of age and older and patients with dementia at baseline cognitive function on admission.

The focus was on managing five risk factors: cognitive impairment, sleep deprivation, immobility, visual/hearing impairment, and medications. The nurses and residents caring for the patients were educated about methods that were proven to decrease the incidence of delirium. These include:

  • Using clocks and blinds to help restore circadian balance
  • Encouraging cognitive stimulation and regular visits from family and friends
  • Facilitating physiologic sleep with avoidance of interruption during sleeping hours
  • Initiating early mobilization and minimizing use of physical restraints

The result? In the pre-intervention group, 48% of the patients were found to have delirium with different precipitating factors. In the post-intervention group, the incidence decreased to 26.9%.

“This project was undertaken to increase the awareness of a non-costly, easy, and available intervention to prevent delirium,” says lead author Marcelle Meseeha, MD, a hospitalist at Guthrie Robert Packer Hospital. “Post-intervention study showed that the incidence of delirium has significantly decreased applying simple interventions. These familiar practices should be a mandatory process or a reminder in electronic health records. Also, education of providers and nursing staff must be an ongoing process. This will help reduce the incidence of delirium with its deleterious sequelae.” TH

Reference

  1. Meseeha M, Attia M. Ways to reduce incidence of hospital ward-acquired delirium; a quality improvement project [abstract]. J Hosp Med. 2016;11(suppl 1). Accessed July 18, 2016.
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Intervention Decreases Urinary Tract Infections from Catheters

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Compared to other healthcare-associated infections, catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTIs) cause relatively low rates of mortality and morbidity, but their prevalence nevertheless leads to a considerable cumulative burden.

Image Credit: Shuttershock.com

Hospitalists can impact CAUTI rates by using a simple bundle of interventions. This idea was recently demonstrated by a quality improvement project addressing high CAUTI rates in the hospital setting. The project was summarized in a paper published in The Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety.

The project identified a bundle of primary interventions to reduce CAUTI, which consisted of six elements: the “6 Cs” of CAUTI reduction. These include “consider alternatives,” “culture urine only when indication is clear,” and “connect with a securement device.” The interventions were implemented on one ICU with excellent results and subsequently diffused throughout the healthcare facility using multimedia tools. CAUTI rates decreased by 70%.

“The first steps in CAUTI prevention are to ensure that catheters are placed only when necessary, aseptic technique used for placement, and that they are removed when no longer essential,” says lead author Priya Sampathkumar, MD, Mayo Clinic associate professor of medicine. “Once this has been achieved, if CAUTI rates are still high, a secondary bundle of CAUTI prevention can help to reduce CAUTI further.”

About one in four hospitalized patients have a urinary catheter in place.2 “Hospitalists, therefore, can have a significant impact on CAUTI by being mindful about catheter use and catheter management.” Dr. Sampathkumar says.

References

  1. Sampathkumar P, Barth JW, Johnson M, et al. Mayo Clinic reduces catheter-associated urinary tract infections. Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf. 2016;42(6):254-265.
  2. Catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTI). Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website. Accessed August 8, 2016.
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Compared to other healthcare-associated infections, catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTIs) cause relatively low rates of mortality and morbidity, but their prevalence nevertheless leads to a considerable cumulative burden.

Image Credit: Shuttershock.com

Hospitalists can impact CAUTI rates by using a simple bundle of interventions. This idea was recently demonstrated by a quality improvement project addressing high CAUTI rates in the hospital setting. The project was summarized in a paper published in The Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety.

The project identified a bundle of primary interventions to reduce CAUTI, which consisted of six elements: the “6 Cs” of CAUTI reduction. These include “consider alternatives,” “culture urine only when indication is clear,” and “connect with a securement device.” The interventions were implemented on one ICU with excellent results and subsequently diffused throughout the healthcare facility using multimedia tools. CAUTI rates decreased by 70%.

“The first steps in CAUTI prevention are to ensure that catheters are placed only when necessary, aseptic technique used for placement, and that they are removed when no longer essential,” says lead author Priya Sampathkumar, MD, Mayo Clinic associate professor of medicine. “Once this has been achieved, if CAUTI rates are still high, a secondary bundle of CAUTI prevention can help to reduce CAUTI further.”

About one in four hospitalized patients have a urinary catheter in place.2 “Hospitalists, therefore, can have a significant impact on CAUTI by being mindful about catheter use and catheter management.” Dr. Sampathkumar says.

References

  1. Sampathkumar P, Barth JW, Johnson M, et al. Mayo Clinic reduces catheter-associated urinary tract infections. Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf. 2016;42(6):254-265.
  2. Catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTI). Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website. Accessed August 8, 2016.

Compared to other healthcare-associated infections, catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTIs) cause relatively low rates of mortality and morbidity, but their prevalence nevertheless leads to a considerable cumulative burden.

Image Credit: Shuttershock.com

Hospitalists can impact CAUTI rates by using a simple bundle of interventions. This idea was recently demonstrated by a quality improvement project addressing high CAUTI rates in the hospital setting. The project was summarized in a paper published in The Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety.

The project identified a bundle of primary interventions to reduce CAUTI, which consisted of six elements: the “6 Cs” of CAUTI reduction. These include “consider alternatives,” “culture urine only when indication is clear,” and “connect with a securement device.” The interventions were implemented on one ICU with excellent results and subsequently diffused throughout the healthcare facility using multimedia tools. CAUTI rates decreased by 70%.

“The first steps in CAUTI prevention are to ensure that catheters are placed only when necessary, aseptic technique used for placement, and that they are removed when no longer essential,” says lead author Priya Sampathkumar, MD, Mayo Clinic associate professor of medicine. “Once this has been achieved, if CAUTI rates are still high, a secondary bundle of CAUTI prevention can help to reduce CAUTI further.”

About one in four hospitalized patients have a urinary catheter in place.2 “Hospitalists, therefore, can have a significant impact on CAUTI by being mindful about catheter use and catheter management.” Dr. Sampathkumar says.

References

  1. Sampathkumar P, Barth JW, Johnson M, et al. Mayo Clinic reduces catheter-associated urinary tract infections. Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf. 2016;42(6):254-265.
  2. Catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTI). Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website. Accessed August 8, 2016.
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New HCV Diagnostic Tests Provide Accuracy and Low Costs

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NEW YORK - Several hepatitis C virus core antigen (HCVcAg) tests accurately diagnose hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection and could replace nucleic acid testing (NAT) in settings where HCV is prevalent, according to a systematic review and meta-analysis.

"Overall, several of the tests perform very well and while they are not equal to NAT, the lower costs may improve diagnostic capacity in the appropriate setting," Dr. J. Morgan Freiman from Boston Medical Center in Massachusetts told Reuters Health by email.

The current two-step diagnostic procedure for diagnosing HCV infection -- screening for antibodies to HCV followed by NAT for those with anti-HCV antibodies -- is a major bottleneck for addressing the HCV elimination strategy proposed by the World Health Organization. Currently, there are five tests for HCVcAg commercially available.

Dr. Freiman and colleagues evaluated the accuracy of diagnosis of active HCV infection among adults and children for these five commercially available tests compared with NAT in their systematic review and meta-analysis of 44 published reports.

The pooled sensitivity and specificity were 93.4% and 98.8% for the Abbott ARCHITECT assay, 93.2% and 99.2% for the Ortho HCV Ag ELISA, and 59.5% and 82.9% for the Hunan Jynda HCV Ag ELISA. There was insufficient information for a pooled analysis of the Eiken Lumispot HCV Ag and the Fujirebio Lumipulse Ortho HCV Ag assays.

Three reports showed that the HCVcAg correlated well with RNA when levels were at least 3000 IU/mL when the Abbott ARCHITECT assay was used, according to the June 21 Annals of Internal Medicine report.

"Although even tests with the highest performance are not as sensitive as NAT, well-performing HCVcAg tests with an analytic sensitivity reaching into the femtomolar range (equal to 3000 IU/mL) could replace NAT for HCV detection, particularly if a lower cost per test allows more patients to be served," the researchers conclude. "Therefore, HCVcAg should be explored for point-of-care (POC) testing to increase the number of patients diagnosed and streamline the HCV cascade of care."

"There is much more work to be done to determine at what sensitivity threshold a POC test would be clinically useful," Dr. Freiman said. "In settings with reliable access to centralized laboratory processing and higher diagnostic capacity, a POC test may still prove to be useful as a screening tool, but would be less likely to replace confirmatory nucleic acid testing (NAT)."

"We have the technology to detect circulating HCV RNA down to 15 IU/mL - amazing -- but how clinically relevant is that threshold when access to testing is equally as important as accuracy in resource limited settings?" he wondered.

Dr. Jose-Manuel Echevarria, from Carlos III Health Institute, Madrid, Spain, who recently reported that HCV core-specific antibody may represent occult HCV infection among blood donors, told Reuters Health by email, "Physicians should conclude from the report that HCVcAg testing provides trustful diagnostic results for the characterization of their anti-HCV positive patients as viremic or non-viremic before deciding about antiviral treatment."

"I would add that HCVcAg testing is particularly useful for the purpose of transfusion centers," he said. "Chronically infected blood donors are detected by anti-HCV screening, and HCVcAg will detect efficiently almost every blood unit obtained from donors experiencing the window period of the acute HCV infection, who test negative for anti-HCV."

"At present, high-resource settings will for sure use NAT testing because of its higher sensitivity, and because automatic equipment has reduced the chance for false-positive results because sample-to-sample contamination (is kept) to a minimum," Dr. Echevarria concluded. "However, HCVcAg testing is extremely useful and convenient for low-resource settings, and also for emergency units everywhere."

The National Institutes of Health funded this research. Three coauthors reported disclosures.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/28LpRcU Ann Intern Med 2016.

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NEW YORK - Several hepatitis C virus core antigen (HCVcAg) tests accurately diagnose hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection and could replace nucleic acid testing (NAT) in settings where HCV is prevalent, according to a systematic review and meta-analysis.

"Overall, several of the tests perform very well and while they are not equal to NAT, the lower costs may improve diagnostic capacity in the appropriate setting," Dr. J. Morgan Freiman from Boston Medical Center in Massachusetts told Reuters Health by email.

The current two-step diagnostic procedure for diagnosing HCV infection -- screening for antibodies to HCV followed by NAT for those with anti-HCV antibodies -- is a major bottleneck for addressing the HCV elimination strategy proposed by the World Health Organization. Currently, there are five tests for HCVcAg commercially available.

Dr. Freiman and colleagues evaluated the accuracy of diagnosis of active HCV infection among adults and children for these five commercially available tests compared with NAT in their systematic review and meta-analysis of 44 published reports.

The pooled sensitivity and specificity were 93.4% and 98.8% for the Abbott ARCHITECT assay, 93.2% and 99.2% for the Ortho HCV Ag ELISA, and 59.5% and 82.9% for the Hunan Jynda HCV Ag ELISA. There was insufficient information for a pooled analysis of the Eiken Lumispot HCV Ag and the Fujirebio Lumipulse Ortho HCV Ag assays.

Three reports showed that the HCVcAg correlated well with RNA when levels were at least 3000 IU/mL when the Abbott ARCHITECT assay was used, according to the June 21 Annals of Internal Medicine report.

"Although even tests with the highest performance are not as sensitive as NAT, well-performing HCVcAg tests with an analytic sensitivity reaching into the femtomolar range (equal to 3000 IU/mL) could replace NAT for HCV detection, particularly if a lower cost per test allows more patients to be served," the researchers conclude. "Therefore, HCVcAg should be explored for point-of-care (POC) testing to increase the number of patients diagnosed and streamline the HCV cascade of care."

"There is much more work to be done to determine at what sensitivity threshold a POC test would be clinically useful," Dr. Freiman said. "In settings with reliable access to centralized laboratory processing and higher diagnostic capacity, a POC test may still prove to be useful as a screening tool, but would be less likely to replace confirmatory nucleic acid testing (NAT)."

"We have the technology to detect circulating HCV RNA down to 15 IU/mL - amazing -- but how clinically relevant is that threshold when access to testing is equally as important as accuracy in resource limited settings?" he wondered.

Dr. Jose-Manuel Echevarria, from Carlos III Health Institute, Madrid, Spain, who recently reported that HCV core-specific antibody may represent occult HCV infection among blood donors, told Reuters Health by email, "Physicians should conclude from the report that HCVcAg testing provides trustful diagnostic results for the characterization of their anti-HCV positive patients as viremic or non-viremic before deciding about antiviral treatment."

"I would add that HCVcAg testing is particularly useful for the purpose of transfusion centers," he said. "Chronically infected blood donors are detected by anti-HCV screening, and HCVcAg will detect efficiently almost every blood unit obtained from donors experiencing the window period of the acute HCV infection, who test negative for anti-HCV."

"At present, high-resource settings will for sure use NAT testing because of its higher sensitivity, and because automatic equipment has reduced the chance for false-positive results because sample-to-sample contamination (is kept) to a minimum," Dr. Echevarria concluded. "However, HCVcAg testing is extremely useful and convenient for low-resource settings, and also for emergency units everywhere."

The National Institutes of Health funded this research. Three coauthors reported disclosures.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/28LpRcU Ann Intern Med 2016.

NEW YORK - Several hepatitis C virus core antigen (HCVcAg) tests accurately diagnose hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection and could replace nucleic acid testing (NAT) in settings where HCV is prevalent, according to a systematic review and meta-analysis.

"Overall, several of the tests perform very well and while they are not equal to NAT, the lower costs may improve diagnostic capacity in the appropriate setting," Dr. J. Morgan Freiman from Boston Medical Center in Massachusetts told Reuters Health by email.

The current two-step diagnostic procedure for diagnosing HCV infection -- screening for antibodies to HCV followed by NAT for those with anti-HCV antibodies -- is a major bottleneck for addressing the HCV elimination strategy proposed by the World Health Organization. Currently, there are five tests for HCVcAg commercially available.

Dr. Freiman and colleagues evaluated the accuracy of diagnosis of active HCV infection among adults and children for these five commercially available tests compared with NAT in their systematic review and meta-analysis of 44 published reports.

The pooled sensitivity and specificity were 93.4% and 98.8% for the Abbott ARCHITECT assay, 93.2% and 99.2% for the Ortho HCV Ag ELISA, and 59.5% and 82.9% for the Hunan Jynda HCV Ag ELISA. There was insufficient information for a pooled analysis of the Eiken Lumispot HCV Ag and the Fujirebio Lumipulse Ortho HCV Ag assays.

Three reports showed that the HCVcAg correlated well with RNA when levels were at least 3000 IU/mL when the Abbott ARCHITECT assay was used, according to the June 21 Annals of Internal Medicine report.

"Although even tests with the highest performance are not as sensitive as NAT, well-performing HCVcAg tests with an analytic sensitivity reaching into the femtomolar range (equal to 3000 IU/mL) could replace NAT for HCV detection, particularly if a lower cost per test allows more patients to be served," the researchers conclude. "Therefore, HCVcAg should be explored for point-of-care (POC) testing to increase the number of patients diagnosed and streamline the HCV cascade of care."

"There is much more work to be done to determine at what sensitivity threshold a POC test would be clinically useful," Dr. Freiman said. "In settings with reliable access to centralized laboratory processing and higher diagnostic capacity, a POC test may still prove to be useful as a screening tool, but would be less likely to replace confirmatory nucleic acid testing (NAT)."

"We have the technology to detect circulating HCV RNA down to 15 IU/mL - amazing -- but how clinically relevant is that threshold when access to testing is equally as important as accuracy in resource limited settings?" he wondered.

Dr. Jose-Manuel Echevarria, from Carlos III Health Institute, Madrid, Spain, who recently reported that HCV core-specific antibody may represent occult HCV infection among blood donors, told Reuters Health by email, "Physicians should conclude from the report that HCVcAg testing provides trustful diagnostic results for the characterization of their anti-HCV positive patients as viremic or non-viremic before deciding about antiviral treatment."

"I would add that HCVcAg testing is particularly useful for the purpose of transfusion centers," he said. "Chronically infected blood donors are detected by anti-HCV screening, and HCVcAg will detect efficiently almost every blood unit obtained from donors experiencing the window period of the acute HCV infection, who test negative for anti-HCV."

"At present, high-resource settings will for sure use NAT testing because of its higher sensitivity, and because automatic equipment has reduced the chance for false-positive results because sample-to-sample contamination (is kept) to a minimum," Dr. Echevarria concluded. "However, HCVcAg testing is extremely useful and convenient for low-resource settings, and also for emergency units everywhere."

The National Institutes of Health funded this research. Three coauthors reported disclosures.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/28LpRcU Ann Intern Med 2016.

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Reducing Drug Expenditure with Computerized Alerts

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Hospitalists face ever-increasing pressure to reduce drug expenditures without compromising the quality of care provided to patients, and as a consequence, are creating new ways to approach the issue. A recent study published in the American Journal of Medical Quality assessed the effectiveness of computerized provider order entry alerts as one method. The alerts displayed the cost of a high-cost medication alongside a lower-cost alternative.

Image Credit: Shuttershock.com

“We regularly scrutinize our drug budgets and look for medications that display changing costs/utilization,” says Gregory K. Gipson, PharmD, cardiothoracic surgery and cardiology pharmacist at the University of Washington and lead author of “Optimizing Prescribing Practices of High-Cost Medications with Computerized Alerts in the Inpatient Setting.”

“We were able to identify a few medications that were both high in cost and utilization but had lower-cost alternatives that could be substituted in certain situations,” Dr. Gipson says. “These higher-cost medications also had formulary restrictions for use; however, it was felt that very few people knew about these restrictions or had any idea how much any of these medications cost. In an attempt to reduce unnecessary use of these high-cost medications, we created alerts that informed providers of the cost of both high- and low-cost medications and restrictions for use, and we gave them the ability to convert the order to the lower-cost alternative.”

The study looked specifically at three high-cost medications and their utilization during the year prior to the intervention and compared it to usage in the year after implementation, and it found reduced utilization of high-cost medications.

“Ipratropium hydrofluoroalkane and fluticasone hydrofluoroalkane metered dose inhaler utilization were reduced by 29% and 62%, respectively (P

Overall, they saw this as a success. “This type of interruptive electronic order entry alert containing cost information and therapeutic alternatives is an effective educational tool that reduces medication costs,” Dr. Gipson says. “… This suggests that new computerized alerts can be implemented in thoughtful ways to minimize the interference with hospital workflow and alert fatigue yet still achieve their desired outcome.”

Reference

  1. Gipson G, Kelly JL, McKinney CM, White AA. Optimizing prescribing practices of high-cost medications with computerized alerts in the inpatient setting. Am J Med Qual. doi:10.1177/1062860616649660.

Quick Byte

Telehealth Expansion

Image Credit: Shuttershock.com

In 2014, reimbursements for telehealth accounted for less than $14 million out of the more than $600 billion spent through the Medicare program, according to “Integrating Health Care and Housing to Promote Healthy Aging,” a recent Health Affairs blog. But, the authors suggest, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and state Medicaid programs should encourage greater reimbursement of telehealth and other technologies that have the potential to improve health outcomes and reduce costs, especially for seniors who could remain at home. “The shift away from fee-for-service payment toward value-based delivery and payment models represents a key opportunity for broader integration of telehealth,” according to the post.

Reference

1. Schwartz A, Parekh A. Integrating health care and housing to promote healthy aging. Health Aff. Available at: http://healthaffairs.org/blog/2016/05/23/integrating-health-care-and-housing-to-promote-healthy-aging/. Accessed May 31, 2016.

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Hospitalists face ever-increasing pressure to reduce drug expenditures without compromising the quality of care provided to patients, and as a consequence, are creating new ways to approach the issue. A recent study published in the American Journal of Medical Quality assessed the effectiveness of computerized provider order entry alerts as one method. The alerts displayed the cost of a high-cost medication alongside a lower-cost alternative.

Image Credit: Shuttershock.com

“We regularly scrutinize our drug budgets and look for medications that display changing costs/utilization,” says Gregory K. Gipson, PharmD, cardiothoracic surgery and cardiology pharmacist at the University of Washington and lead author of “Optimizing Prescribing Practices of High-Cost Medications with Computerized Alerts in the Inpatient Setting.”

“We were able to identify a few medications that were both high in cost and utilization but had lower-cost alternatives that could be substituted in certain situations,” Dr. Gipson says. “These higher-cost medications also had formulary restrictions for use; however, it was felt that very few people knew about these restrictions or had any idea how much any of these medications cost. In an attempt to reduce unnecessary use of these high-cost medications, we created alerts that informed providers of the cost of both high- and low-cost medications and restrictions for use, and we gave them the ability to convert the order to the lower-cost alternative.”

The study looked specifically at three high-cost medications and their utilization during the year prior to the intervention and compared it to usage in the year after implementation, and it found reduced utilization of high-cost medications.

“Ipratropium hydrofluoroalkane and fluticasone hydrofluoroalkane metered dose inhaler utilization were reduced by 29% and 62%, respectively (P

Overall, they saw this as a success. “This type of interruptive electronic order entry alert containing cost information and therapeutic alternatives is an effective educational tool that reduces medication costs,” Dr. Gipson says. “… This suggests that new computerized alerts can be implemented in thoughtful ways to minimize the interference with hospital workflow and alert fatigue yet still achieve their desired outcome.”

Reference

  1. Gipson G, Kelly JL, McKinney CM, White AA. Optimizing prescribing practices of high-cost medications with computerized alerts in the inpatient setting. Am J Med Qual. doi:10.1177/1062860616649660.

Quick Byte

Telehealth Expansion

Image Credit: Shuttershock.com

In 2014, reimbursements for telehealth accounted for less than $14 million out of the more than $600 billion spent through the Medicare program, according to “Integrating Health Care and Housing to Promote Healthy Aging,” a recent Health Affairs blog. But, the authors suggest, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and state Medicaid programs should encourage greater reimbursement of telehealth and other technologies that have the potential to improve health outcomes and reduce costs, especially for seniors who could remain at home. “The shift away from fee-for-service payment toward value-based delivery and payment models represents a key opportunity for broader integration of telehealth,” according to the post.

Reference

1. Schwartz A, Parekh A. Integrating health care and housing to promote healthy aging. Health Aff. Available at: http://healthaffairs.org/blog/2016/05/23/integrating-health-care-and-housing-to-promote-healthy-aging/. Accessed May 31, 2016.

Hospitalists face ever-increasing pressure to reduce drug expenditures without compromising the quality of care provided to patients, and as a consequence, are creating new ways to approach the issue. A recent study published in the American Journal of Medical Quality assessed the effectiveness of computerized provider order entry alerts as one method. The alerts displayed the cost of a high-cost medication alongside a lower-cost alternative.

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“We regularly scrutinize our drug budgets and look for medications that display changing costs/utilization,” says Gregory K. Gipson, PharmD, cardiothoracic surgery and cardiology pharmacist at the University of Washington and lead author of “Optimizing Prescribing Practices of High-Cost Medications with Computerized Alerts in the Inpatient Setting.”

“We were able to identify a few medications that were both high in cost and utilization but had lower-cost alternatives that could be substituted in certain situations,” Dr. Gipson says. “These higher-cost medications also had formulary restrictions for use; however, it was felt that very few people knew about these restrictions or had any idea how much any of these medications cost. In an attempt to reduce unnecessary use of these high-cost medications, we created alerts that informed providers of the cost of both high- and low-cost medications and restrictions for use, and we gave them the ability to convert the order to the lower-cost alternative.”

The study looked specifically at three high-cost medications and their utilization during the year prior to the intervention and compared it to usage in the year after implementation, and it found reduced utilization of high-cost medications.

“Ipratropium hydrofluoroalkane and fluticasone hydrofluoroalkane metered dose inhaler utilization were reduced by 29% and 62%, respectively (P

Overall, they saw this as a success. “This type of interruptive electronic order entry alert containing cost information and therapeutic alternatives is an effective educational tool that reduces medication costs,” Dr. Gipson says. “… This suggests that new computerized alerts can be implemented in thoughtful ways to minimize the interference with hospital workflow and alert fatigue yet still achieve their desired outcome.”

Reference

  1. Gipson G, Kelly JL, McKinney CM, White AA. Optimizing prescribing practices of high-cost medications with computerized alerts in the inpatient setting. Am J Med Qual. doi:10.1177/1062860616649660.

Quick Byte

Telehealth Expansion

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In 2014, reimbursements for telehealth accounted for less than $14 million out of the more than $600 billion spent through the Medicare program, according to “Integrating Health Care and Housing to Promote Healthy Aging,” a recent Health Affairs blog. But, the authors suggest, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and state Medicaid programs should encourage greater reimbursement of telehealth and other technologies that have the potential to improve health outcomes and reduce costs, especially for seniors who could remain at home. “The shift away from fee-for-service payment toward value-based delivery and payment models represents a key opportunity for broader integration of telehealth,” according to the post.

Reference

1. Schwartz A, Parekh A. Integrating health care and housing to promote healthy aging. Health Aff. Available at: http://healthaffairs.org/blog/2016/05/23/integrating-health-care-and-housing-to-promote-healthy-aging/. Accessed May 31, 2016.

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Tips Toward Better Clinical Summaries

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“I recently discharged a complex patient from the hospital, and I was shocked to see the poor quality of his clinical summary,” says Erin Sarzynski, MD, MS, of Michigan State University’s Department of Family Medicine. This observation drove the research underlying the paper she co-wrote titled “Opportunities to Improve Clinical Summaries for Patients at Hospital Discharge,” published in BMJ Quality & Safety.

The problem, the paper lays out, is that, “presently, it is unclear whether clinical summaries include relevant content or whether healthcare organizations configure their EHRs to generate content in a way that promotes patient self-management after hospital discharge.”

As a first step toward improving these documents, Dr. Sarzynski worked with a team to evaluate 100 clinical summaries generated at two Michigan hospitals based on content, organization, and understandability. They became aware of systemic problems.

“Clinical summaries are produced from templates, but physicians’ workflows do not prompt them to preview the document before the nurse prints it to review with the patient,” Dr. Sarzynski says. “Clinical summaries are lengthy yet omit key discharge information. They are poorly organized, written at the 8th- to 12th-grade reading level, and score poorly on assessments of understandability and actionability.

“Medication lists illustrate a key safety issue resulting from poor-quality clinical summaries; for example, we routinely send patients home without parameters for sliding-scale insulin.”

The study highlights opportunities to improve clinical summaries for guiding patients’ post-discharge care.

“We developed an audit tool based on the Meaningful Use view-download-transmit objective and the SHM Discharge Checklist (content); the Institute of Medicine recommendations for distributing easy-to-understand print material (organization); and five readability formulas and the Patient Education Materials Assessment Tool,” the authors write.

“If possible, hospitalists should preview their patients’ clinical summaries before printing—it’s an opportunity to ensure key discharge information is correct and appropriately emphasized,” Dr. Sarzynski says.

Reference

  1. Sarzynski E, Hashmi H, Subramanian J, et al. Opportunities to improve clinical summaries for patients at hospital discharge. BMJ Qual Saf. doi:10.1136/bmjqs-2015-005201.
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“I recently discharged a complex patient from the hospital, and I was shocked to see the poor quality of his clinical summary,” says Erin Sarzynski, MD, MS, of Michigan State University’s Department of Family Medicine. This observation drove the research underlying the paper she co-wrote titled “Opportunities to Improve Clinical Summaries for Patients at Hospital Discharge,” published in BMJ Quality & Safety.

The problem, the paper lays out, is that, “presently, it is unclear whether clinical summaries include relevant content or whether healthcare organizations configure their EHRs to generate content in a way that promotes patient self-management after hospital discharge.”

As a first step toward improving these documents, Dr. Sarzynski worked with a team to evaluate 100 clinical summaries generated at two Michigan hospitals based on content, organization, and understandability. They became aware of systemic problems.

“Clinical summaries are produced from templates, but physicians’ workflows do not prompt them to preview the document before the nurse prints it to review with the patient,” Dr. Sarzynski says. “Clinical summaries are lengthy yet omit key discharge information. They are poorly organized, written at the 8th- to 12th-grade reading level, and score poorly on assessments of understandability and actionability.

“Medication lists illustrate a key safety issue resulting from poor-quality clinical summaries; for example, we routinely send patients home without parameters for sliding-scale insulin.”

The study highlights opportunities to improve clinical summaries for guiding patients’ post-discharge care.

“We developed an audit tool based on the Meaningful Use view-download-transmit objective and the SHM Discharge Checklist (content); the Institute of Medicine recommendations for distributing easy-to-understand print material (organization); and five readability formulas and the Patient Education Materials Assessment Tool,” the authors write.

“If possible, hospitalists should preview their patients’ clinical summaries before printing—it’s an opportunity to ensure key discharge information is correct and appropriately emphasized,” Dr. Sarzynski says.

Reference

  1. Sarzynski E, Hashmi H, Subramanian J, et al. Opportunities to improve clinical summaries for patients at hospital discharge. BMJ Qual Saf. doi:10.1136/bmjqs-2015-005201.

“I recently discharged a complex patient from the hospital, and I was shocked to see the poor quality of his clinical summary,” says Erin Sarzynski, MD, MS, of Michigan State University’s Department of Family Medicine. This observation drove the research underlying the paper she co-wrote titled “Opportunities to Improve Clinical Summaries for Patients at Hospital Discharge,” published in BMJ Quality & Safety.

The problem, the paper lays out, is that, “presently, it is unclear whether clinical summaries include relevant content or whether healthcare organizations configure their EHRs to generate content in a way that promotes patient self-management after hospital discharge.”

As a first step toward improving these documents, Dr. Sarzynski worked with a team to evaluate 100 clinical summaries generated at two Michigan hospitals based on content, organization, and understandability. They became aware of systemic problems.

“Clinical summaries are produced from templates, but physicians’ workflows do not prompt them to preview the document before the nurse prints it to review with the patient,” Dr. Sarzynski says. “Clinical summaries are lengthy yet omit key discharge information. They are poorly organized, written at the 8th- to 12th-grade reading level, and score poorly on assessments of understandability and actionability.

“Medication lists illustrate a key safety issue resulting from poor-quality clinical summaries; for example, we routinely send patients home without parameters for sliding-scale insulin.”

The study highlights opportunities to improve clinical summaries for guiding patients’ post-discharge care.

“We developed an audit tool based on the Meaningful Use view-download-transmit objective and the SHM Discharge Checklist (content); the Institute of Medicine recommendations for distributing easy-to-understand print material (organization); and five readability formulas and the Patient Education Materials Assessment Tool,” the authors write.

“If possible, hospitalists should preview their patients’ clinical summaries before printing—it’s an opportunity to ensure key discharge information is correct and appropriately emphasized,” Dr. Sarzynski says.

Reference

  1. Sarzynski E, Hashmi H, Subramanian J, et al. Opportunities to improve clinical summaries for patients at hospital discharge. BMJ Qual Saf. doi:10.1136/bmjqs-2015-005201.
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