New quality improvement study by Dr. Ekta Khemani and colleagues featured in BMJ QI Reports

BMJ Qual Improv Rep. 2016 Apr 4;5(1). pii: u211376.w4582. 


Reducing inappropriate ESR testing with computerized clinical decision support

Gottheil S, Khemani E, Copley K, Keeney M, Kinney J, Chin-Yee I, Gob A.

Abstract

Laboratory test overutilization increases health care costs, leads to unwarranted investigations, and may have a negative impact on health outcomes. The American Society of Clinical Pathology, in its Choosing Wisely Campaign, advocates that inflammation be investigated with C-reactive protein (CRP) instead of Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate (ESR). London Health Sciences Centre (LHSC), a tertiary care hospital organization in Ontario, Canada, set a goal to reduce inappropriate ESR orders by 50%. After developing appropriateness criteria for ESR, we used a series of PDSA cycles to reduce inappropriate ESR ordering and analyzed our results with an interrupted time series design. Our intervention began with an educational bulletin and moved to city-wide implementation of computerized Clinical Decision Support (CDS). After implementation, ESR orders decreased by 40% from 386 orders per week to 241 orders per week. Our results are supported by previous literature on the effectiveness of CDS in reducing overutilization and suggest that provider habit is a significant contributor to inappropriate ordering.

Read the full-text in BMJ Quality Improvement Reports

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