A Quality Initiative to Improve Appropriate Medication Dosing in Pediatric Patients with Obesity

Author:

Cloyd Colleen P.12,Macedone Danielle13,Merandi Jenna1,Pierson Shawn1,Sellas Wcislo Maria1,Lutmer Jeffrey24,MacDonald Jennifer24,Ayad Onsy24,Kalata Lindsay1,Thompson R. Zachary12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmacy, Nationwide Children’s Hospital, Columbus Ohio

2. Department of Critical Care Medicine, Nationwide Children’s Hospital, Columbus, Ohio

3. Nationwide Children’s Hospital Center for Clinical Excellence, Columbus, Ohio

4. The Ohio State University College of Medicine, Columbus, Ohio.

Abstract

Introduction: Emerging evidence supports the use of alternative dosing weights for medications in patients with obesity. Pediatric obesity presents a particular challenge because most medications are dosed based on patient weight. Additionally, building system-wide pediatric obesity safeguards is difficult due to pediatric obesity definitions of body mass index-percentile-for-age via the Center for Disease Control growth charts. We describe a quality initiative to increase appropriate medication dosing in inpatients with obesity. The specific aim was to increase appropriate dosing for 7 high-risk medications in inpatients with obesity ≥2 years old from 37% to >74% and to sustain for 1 year. Methods: The Institute for Healthcare Improvement model for improvement was used to plan interventions and track outcomes progress. Interventions included a literature review to establish internal dosing guidance, electronic health record (EHR) functionality to identify pediatric patients with obesity, a default selection for medication weight with an opt-out, and obtaining patient heights in the emergency department. Results: Appropriate dosing weight use in medication ordered for patients with obesity increased from 37% to 83.4% and was sustained above the goal of 74% for 12 months. Conclusions: Implementation of EHR-based clinical decision support has increased appropriate evidence-based dosing of medications in pediatric and adult inpatients with obesity. Future studies should investigate the clinical and safety implications of using alternative dosing weights in pediatric patients.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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