Takechi Daisuke, Kuroda Naoto, Dote Hisashi, Kim Euido, Yonekawa Osamu, Watanabe Takuya, Urano Tetsumei, Homma Yoichiro
Department of General Internal Medicine Seirei Hamamatsu General Hospital Hamamatsu Shizuoka Japan.
Department of Emergency & Critical Care Medicine Seirei Hamamatsu General Hospital Hamamatsu Shizuoka Japan.
Acute Med Surg. 2017 Jun 19;4(4):385-393. doi: 10.1002/ams2.289. eCollection 2017 Oct.
We hypothesized that the quality of the assessment of abnormal laboratory data in the emergency department (ED) could affect the hospital-attending physicians' decision-making after a patient's hospitalization. To test this hypothesis, we investigated how patients with a positive D-dimer result were reported by ED physicians in electronic medical records, and measured whether lower extremity venous ultrasonography examination was undertaken during hospitalization by the hospital-attending physicians.
In an urban tertiary acute care general hospital in Japan, between January 2012 and December 2013, we included patients hospitalized after a positive D-dimer measurement (≥1.0 μg/mL) that was taken in the emergency department. We retrospectively measured the quality of ED physician assessments. Then we examined whether that affected the decisions of attending physicians to order lower extremity venous ultrasonography examinations during hospitalization. The exposure variable was the quality of the ED physicians' assessment of patients with positive D-dimer results. The outcome was whether a lower extremity venous ultrasonography examination was ordered by the attending physician during hospitalization.
When assessments were described by ED physicians for patients with positive D-dimer results, the attending physicians frequently ordered lower extremity venous ultrasonography (odds ratio, 10.74; 95% confidence interval, 5.92-19.50), even if the assessments only contained "copied and pasted" laboratory data (odds ratio, 1.68; 95% confidence interval, 2.10-2.40).
Better documentation by ED physicians, regarding patients with positive D-dimer results, strongly affected the decisions made by attending physicians to order lower extremity venous ultrasonography examination.
我们假设急诊科(ED)对异常实验室数据的评估质量可能会影响患者住院后医院主治医生的决策。为了验证这一假设,我们调查了ED医生在电子病历中如何报告D - 二聚体结果呈阳性的患者,并测量了医院主治医生在患者住院期间是否进行了下肢静脉超声检查。
在日本一家城市三级急性护理综合医院,于2012年1月至2013年12月期间,我们纳入了在急诊科进行D - 二聚体测量呈阳性(≥1.0μg/mL)后住院的患者。我们回顾性地评估了ED医生评估的质量。然后我们检查这是否会影响主治医生在患者住院期间下令进行下肢静脉超声检查的决策。暴露变量是ED医生对D - 二聚体结果呈阳性患者的评估质量。结果是主治医生在患者住院期间是否下令进行下肢静脉超声检查。
当ED医生描述对D - 二聚体结果呈阳性患者的评估时,主治医生经常下令进行下肢静脉超声检查(优势比,10.74;95%置信区间,5.92 - 19.50),即使评估仅包含“复制粘贴”的实验室数据(优势比,1.68;95%置信区间,2.10 - 2.40)。
ED医生对D - 二聚体结果呈阳性患者的更好记录,强烈影响了主治医生下令进行下肢静脉超声检查的决策。