Singh Hardeep, Thomas Eric J, Mani Shrinidi, Sittig Dean, Arora Harvinder, Espadas Donna, Khan Myrna M, Petersen Laura A
Department of Veterans Affairs Health Services Research & Development Service, Center of Excellence, Michael E. DeBakey Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Houston, Texas, USA.
Arch Intern Med. 2009 Sep 28;169(17):1578-86. doi: 10.1001/archinternmed.2009.263.
Given the fragmentation of outpatient care, timely follow-up of abnormal diagnostic imaging results remains a challenge. We hypothesized that an electronic medical record (EMR) that facilitates the transmission and availability of critical imaging results through either automated notification (alerting) or direct access to the primary report would eliminate this problem.
We studied critical imaging alert notifications in the outpatient setting of a tertiary care Department of Veterans Affairs facility from November 2007 to June 2008. Tracking software determined whether the alert was acknowledged (ie, health care practitioner/provider [HCP] opened the message for viewing) within 2 weeks of transmission; acknowledged alerts were considered read. We reviewed medical records and contacted HCPs to determine timely follow-up actions (eg, ordering a follow-up test or consultation) within 4 weeks of transmission. Multivariable logistic regression models accounting for clustering effect by HCPs analyzed predictors for 2 outcomes: lack of acknowledgment and lack of timely follow-up.
Of 123 638 studies (including radiographs, computed tomographic scans, ultrasonograms, magnetic resonance images, and mammograms), 1196 images (0.97%) generated alerts; 217 (18.1%) of these were unacknowledged. Alerts had a higher risk of being unacknowledged when the ordering HCPs were trainees (odds ratio [OR], 5.58; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.86-10.89) and when dual-alert (>1 HCP alerted) as opposed to single-alert communication was used (OR, 2.02; 95% CI, 1.22-3.36). Timely follow-up was lacking in 92 (7.7% of all alerts) and was similar for acknowledged and unacknowledged alerts (7.3% vs 9.7%; P = .22). Risk for lack of timely follow-up was higher with dual-alert communication (OR, 1.99; 95% CI, 1.06-3.48) but lower when additional verbal communication was used by the radiologist (OR, 0.12; 95% CI, 0.04-0.38). Nearly all abnormal results lacking timely follow-up at 4 weeks were eventually found to have measurable clinical impact in terms of further diagnostic testing or treatment.
Critical imaging results may not receive timely follow-up actions even when HCPs receive and read results in an advanced, integrated electronic medical record system. A multidisciplinary approach is needed to improve patient safety in this area.
鉴于门诊医疗的碎片化,对异常诊断影像结果进行及时随访仍是一项挑战。我们推测,通过自动通知(警报)或直接获取原始报告来促进关键影像结果传输和可用性的电子病历(EMR)将消除这一问题。
我们研究了2007年11月至2008年6月在一家退伍军人事务部三级医疗设施门诊环境中的关键影像警报通知。追踪软件确定警报在传输后2周内是否得到确认(即医护人员/提供者[HCP]打开消息进行查看);得到确认的警报被视为已读。我们查阅病历并联系HCP,以确定在传输后4周内是否有及时的后续行动(如安排后续检查或会诊)。多变量逻辑回归模型考虑了HCP的聚类效应,分析了两个结果的预测因素:未确认和未及时跟进。
在123638项检查(包括X光片、计算机断层扫描、超声检查、磁共振成像和乳房X光检查)中,1196张影像(0.97%)产生了警报;其中217张(18.1%)未得到确认。当开单HCP是实习生时(优势比[OR],5.58;95%置信区间[CI],2.86 - 10.89),以及使用双重警报(>1名HCP收到警报)而非单一警报通信时(OR,2.02;95% CI,1.22 - 3.36),警报未得到确认的风险更高。92例(占所有警报的7.7%)缺乏及时跟进,得到确认和未得到确认的警报情况相似(7.3%对9.7%;P = 0.22)。双重警报通信时缺乏及时跟进的风险更高(OR,1.99;95% CI,1.06 - 3.48),但放射科医生进行额外口头沟通时风险较低(OR,0.12;95% CI,0.04 - 0.38)。在4周时几乎所有缺乏及时跟进的异常结果最终在进一步诊断检查或治疗方面都被发现具有可衡量的临床影响。
即使HCP在先进的综合电子病历系统中接收并阅读了结果,关键影像结果可能仍未得到及时的后续行动。需要采取多学科方法来提高该领域的患者安全。