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Erschienen in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 11/2017

14.08.2017 | Original Research

Primary Care Providers’ Opening of Time-Sensitive Alerts Sent to Commercial Electronic Health Record InBaskets

verfasst von: Sarah L. Cutrona, MD, MPH, Hassan Fouayzi, MS, Laura Burns, BS, Rajani S. Sadasivam, PhD, Kathleen M. Mazor, EdD, Jerry H. Gurwitz, MD, Lawrence Garber, MD, Devi Sundaresan, MS, Thomas K. Houston, MD, MPH, Terry S. Field, DSc

Erschienen in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Ausgabe 11/2017

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Abstract

Background

Time-sensitive alerts are among the many types of clinical notifications delivered to physicians’ secure InBaskets within commercial electronic health records (EHRs). A delayed alert review can impact patient safety and compromise care.

Objective

To characterize factors associated with opening of non-interruptive time-sensitive alerts delivered into primary care provider (PCP) InBaskets.

Design and Participants

We analyzed data for 799 automated alerts. Alerts highlighted actionable medication concerns for older patients post-hospital discharge (2010–2011). These were study-generated alerts sent 3 days post-discharge to InBaskets for 75 PCPs across a multisite healthcare system, and represent a subset of all urgent InBasket notifications.

Main Measures

Using EHR access and audit logs to track alert opening, we performed bivariate and multivariate analyses calculating associations between patient characteristics, provider characteristics, contextual factors at the time of alert delivery (number of InBasket notifications, weekday), and alert opening within 24 h.

Key Results

At the time of alert delivery, the PCPs had a median of 69 InBasket notifications and had received a median of 379.8 notifications (IQR 295.0, 492.0) over the prior 7 days. Of the 799 alerts, 47.1% were opened within 24 h. Patients with longer hospital stays (>4 days) were marginally more likely to have alerts opened (OR 1.48 [95% CI 1.00–2.19]). Alerts delivered to PCPs whose InBaskets had a higher number of notifications at the time of alert delivery were significantly less likely to be opened within 24 h (top quartile >157 notifications: OR 0.34 [95% CI 0.18–0.61]; reference bottom quartile ≤42). Alerts delivered on Saturdays were also less likely to be opened within 24 h (OR 0.18 [CI 0.08–0.39]).

Conclusions

The number of total InBasket notifications and weekend delivery may impact the opening of time-sensitive EHR alerts. Further study is needed to support safe and effective approaches to care team management of InBasket notifications.
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Metadaten
Titel
Primary Care Providers’ Opening of Time-Sensitive Alerts Sent to Commercial Electronic Health Record InBaskets
verfasst von
Sarah L. Cutrona, MD, MPH
Hassan Fouayzi, MS
Laura Burns, BS
Rajani S. Sadasivam, PhD
Kathleen M. Mazor, EdD
Jerry H. Gurwitz, MD
Lawrence Garber, MD
Devi Sundaresan, MS
Thomas K. Houston, MD, MPH
Terry S. Field, DSc
Publikationsdatum
14.08.2017
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Ausgabe 11/2017
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Elektronische ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-017-4146-3

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