Department of Medicine, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB.
J Obstet Gynaecol Can. 2020 Oct;42(10):1223-1229.e3. doi: 10.1016/j.jogc.2020.03.016. Epub 2020 Apr 14.
Pregnant women with suspected or diagnosed preeclampsia receive laboratory investigations. Our institutional protocols were outdated and not evidence based. However, guidelines lack clear direction to support cost-effective use. We aimed to reduce unnecessary laboratory tests, while supporting physicians with investigation selection.
A quality improvement (QI) approach was used to analyze the ordering process in the obstetrics wards of a tertiary care centre. Health care providers were surveyed on their laboratory ordering practices, and their responses corroborated with chart reviews. An algorithm for ordering preeclampsia investigations was developed by a multidisciplinary team, implemented, and posted on the wards. Pocket aides were also distributed, and the algorithm tool was supported by educational seminars. Laboratory usage volume and costs were analyzed pre- and post-intervention. Post-intervention impact surveys, informal interviews, and chart reviews were performed in plan-do-study-act (PDSA) cycles.
Most health care providers ordered broad panels of investigations and re-evaluated patients at inconsistent intervals. Almost none were aware of the laboratory costs associated with this testing. Most respondents acknowledged that some of the investigations they ordered did not affect patient care. Baseline data (Sept 2016-Aug 2017) showed 2923 tests ordered monthly (CAD$18 306). Post-intervention data (Sept 2017-Aug 2019) revealed a 39.9% reduction in costs related to blood tests (a savings of CAD$7304/mo), particularly those tests of lower clinical utility. The performance of essential investigations, such as measurement of creatinine levels, were similar pre- and post-intervention, and thus acted a control measure. The effects of this intervention were sustained.
This simple and inexpensive intervention reduced unnecessary ordering of preeclampsia investigations. This resulted in annualized savings of CAD$87 643 and reduced iatrogenic blood loss, with no evidence of harm. Efforts to scale and spread this clinical tool will further improve health care delivery for pregnant patients.
疑似或确诊子痫前期的孕妇会接受实验室检查。我们的机构方案已过时且缺乏循证依据。但是,指南缺乏明确的指导,无法支持具有成本效益的使用。我们旨在减少不必要的实验室检查,同时为医生提供调查选择的支持。
采用质量改进(QI)方法分析三级保健中心产科病房的医嘱流程。对医护人员的实验室医嘱实践进行了调查,并与病历审查结果进行了核实。一个多学科团队制定了子痫前期检查的医嘱算法,并在病房内实施和发布。还分发了袖珍指南,算法工具得到了教育研讨会的支持。在干预前后分析了实验室使用量和成本。在计划-执行-研究-行动(PDSA)循环中进行了干预后影响调查、非正式访谈和病历审查。
大多数医护人员开具了广泛的检查项目,并以不一致的间隔重新评估患者。几乎没有人了解与这些测试相关的实验室成本。大多数受访者承认,他们开具的一些检查并未影响患者的治疗。基线数据(2016 年 9 月至 2017 年 8 月)显示每月开具 2923 项检查(CAD$18306)。干预后数据(2017 年 9 月至 2019 年 8 月)显示,血液检查相关费用降低了 39.9%(每月节省 CAD$7304),特别是那些临床效用较低的检查。基本检查(如肌酐水平的测量)的执行情况在干预前后相似,因此作为对照措施。这种干预的效果是持续的。
这种简单且经济的干预减少了子痫前期检查的不必要医嘱。这导致每年节省 CAD$87643,并减少了医源性失血,且没有证据表明存在危害。努力扩大和推广这种临床工具将进一步改善孕妇的医疗服务。