Paediatric clinical decision support: Evaluation of a best practice alert for red blood cell transfusion

Author:

Adkins Brian D.12,Murfin Roberta2,Luu Hung S.12,Noland Daniel K.12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pathology University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center Dallas Texas USA

2. Department of Pathology Children's Health Dallas Texas USA

Abstract

AbstractBackground and ObjectivesProviding red blood cell (RBC) transfusion to paediatric patients with a haemoglobin (Hb) level of <7 g/dL is the current best practice, but it is often difficult to ensure appropriateness of RBC transfusion on a health system level. Electronic health record (EHR) clinical decision support systems have been shown to be effective in encouraging providers to transfuse at appropriate Hb thresholds. We present our experience with an interruptive best practice alert (BPA) at a paediatric healthcare system.Materials and MethodsAn interruptive BPA requiring physician response was implemented in our EHR (Epic Systems Corp., Verona, WI, USA) in 2018 based on Hb thresholds for inpatients. The threshold was initially <8 g/dL and later changed to <7 g/dL in 2019. We assessed total activations, number of RBC transfusions and hospital metrics through 2022 compared to the 2 years prior to implementation.ResultsThe BPA activated 6956 times over 4 years, slightly less than 5/day, and the success rate, with no RBC transfusions within 24 h of order attempt, was 14.5% (1012/6956). There was a downward trend in the number of total RBC transfusions and RBC transfusions per admission after implementation, non‐significant (p = 0.41 and p = >0.99). The annual case mix index was similar over the years evaluated. The estimated cost savings based on acquisition costs for RBC units were 213,822 USD or about $51,891 per year.ConclusionBPA implementation led to sustained change in RBC transfusion towards best practice, and there were long‐term savings in RBC expenditure.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Hematology,General Medicine

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