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Erschienen in: Canadian Journal of Anesthesia/Journal canadien d'anesthésie 7/2017

01.07.2017 | Reports of Original Investigations

Electronic medical record interventions and recurrent perioperative antibiotic administration: a before-and-after study

verfasst von: Alexander Hincker, MD, Arbi Ben Abdallah, DES, PhD, Michael Avidan, MBBCH, Penka Candelario, BS, Daniel Helsten, MD

Erschienen in: Canadian Journal of Anesthesia/Journal canadien d'anesthésie | Ausgabe 7/2017

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Abstract

Purpose

Perioperative antibiotics decrease rates of surgical-site infections. Numerous interventions have improved administration of the first antibiotic dose; however, failures in the administration of subsequent doses frequently occur. We hypothesized that modifications to the electronic medical record (EMR) would improve the administration of the second antibiotic dose and that such improvements would be sustained over time.

Methods

This historical cohort before-and-after study of multipronged alerts in the EMR analyzed 1,348 operations on adult patients. The operations lasted ≥ 240 min, utilized cefazolin as the perioperative antibiotic—constituting 1,348 second and 182 third intraoperative antibiotic doses—and did not involve cardiopulmonary bypass. A decision support intervention provided dosing recommendations when clinicians documented antibiotics. The reminder intervention displayed a continuous bar in the EMR, starting at the time the antibiotics were dosed and ending 15 min before subsequent doses were indicated. The primary endpoints of the study were the change in the proportion of correctly administered second dose of cefazolin, given in accordance with hospital guidelines in the month after implementing the intervention, and whether any improvements declined by three to seven months after implementation.

Results

Pre-intervention, 51.4% of second doses of cefazolin were correctly administered. In the immediate post-intervention period, 68.5% were correctly administered, representing a significant absolute improvement of 17.1% (95% confidence interval, 8.1 to 26.1; P < 0.001). Rates did not decline over time; clinicians correctly administered 73.3% of doses in the delayed post-intervention period (P < 0.001 vs pre-intervention).

Conclusions

These inexpensive nonintrusive interventions to the EMR provided modest lasting improvements in proper administration of repeated doses of cefazolin. The fact that only approximately 70% compliance was reached highlights the difficulty in addressing this deficiency.
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Metadaten
Titel
Electronic medical record interventions and recurrent perioperative antibiotic administration: a before-and-after study
verfasst von
Alexander Hincker, MD
Arbi Ben Abdallah, DES, PhD
Michael Avidan, MBBCH
Penka Candelario, BS
Daniel Helsten, MD
Publikationsdatum
01.07.2017
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Canadian Journal of Anesthesia/Journal canadien d'anesthésie / Ausgabe 7/2017
Print ISSN: 0832-610X
Elektronische ISSN: 1496-8975
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12630-017-0885-1

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