학술논문

An Educational and Administrative Intervention to Promote Rational Laboratory Test Ordering on an Academic General Medicine Service
Document Type
article
Source
The American Journal of Medicine. 130(1)
Subject
Health Services and Systems
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Health Sciences
Patient Safety
Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities
Clinical Research
Quality Education
Academic Medical Centers
Boston
Clinical Laboratory Techniques
Female
Humans
Inservice Training
Male
Medical Order Entry Systems
Middle Aged
Organizational Policy
Tertiary Care Centers
Unnecessary Procedures
Diagnostic tests
Medical education
Resource use
Medical and Health Sciences
General & Internal Medicine
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Health sciences
Language
Abstract
BackgroundOveruse of clinical laboratory testing in the inpatient setting is a common problem. The objective of this project was to develop an inexpensive and easily implemented intervention to promote rational laboratory use without compromising resident education or patient care.MethodsThe study comprised of a cluster-randomized, controlled trial to assess the impact of a multifaceted intervention of education, guideline development, elimination of recurring laboratory orders, unbundling of laboratory panels, and redesign of the daily progress note on laboratory test ordering. The population included all patients hospitalized "general medicine" was duplicated during 2 consecutive months on a general medicine teaching service within a 999-bed tertiary care hospital in Boston, Massachusetts. The primary outcome was the total number of commonly used laboratory tests per patient day during 2 months in 2008. Secondary outcomes included a subgroup analysis of each individual test per patient day, adverse events, and resident and nursing satisfaction.ResultsA total of 5392 patient days were captured. The intervention produced a 9% decrease in aggregate laboratory use (rate ratio, 0.91; P = .021; 95% confidence interval, 0.84-0.98). Six instances of delayed diagnosis of acute kidney injury and 11 near misses were reported in the intervention arm.ConclusionsA bundled educational and administrative intervention promoting rational ordering of laboratory tests on a single academic general medicine service led to a modest but significant decrease in laboratory use. To our knowledge, this was the first study to examine the daily progress note as a tool to limit excessive test ordering. Unadjudicated near misses and possible harm were reported with this intervention. This finding warrants further study.