Impact of a passive clinical decision support tool on potentially inappropriate medications (PIM) use in older adult patients

Author:

Luu Alan12,Bui Nghi (Andy)1,Adeola Mobolaji1,Bhakta Sunny1,Fuentes Amaris3,Agarwal Kathryn3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmacy Services Houston Methodist Hospital Houston Texas USA

2. Department of Pharmacy Practice University of Houston College of Pharmacy Houston Texas USA

3. System Quality and Patient Safety Houston Methodist Houston Texas USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundMedication related clinical decision support (CDS) interventions may improve patient safety. In older patient populations, there has been effort placed in reducing exposure to potentially inappropriate medications (PIMs). After years of reducing exposure of older adults in our hospitals to PIMs through multi‐component interventions, our system chose to expand the scope and attempt a new strategy to lessen alert burden for providers and pharmacists. Based on the American Geriatric Society Beers Criteria and internal data, a passive CDS approach, termed “geriatric context” was established to recommend appropriate medication selection including lower dosage amounts and frequency of administration in older adults.MethodsRetrospective descriptive study examining change in a pre and post implementation analysis of medication usage patterns between two 9‐month time periods in 2019 and 2021 in patients age ≥65 years across an 8‐hospital health system. The primary endpoint is the percentage of each medication intervened with an ordered dose and frequency outside of alignment with recommended context parameters. Secondary endpoints include total daily dose (TDD) and average dose (AD) per patient of the individual PIMs. Exploratory endpoints include frequency of active alerts fired by the CPOE and overridden by providers.ResultsA total of 62,738 older adult hospital admissions are included in the overall study period, with 32,969 pre‐implementation and 29,769 post‐implementation. Haloperidol showed the greatest reduction in inappropriate doses from 41.5% to 21.4% (p < 0.001) of orders, followed by reduction in inappropriate frequencies in orders for diphenhydramine from 57.2% to 39.7% (p < 0.001). Secondary endpoints showed favorable reductions across 11 of the 16 medications in both TDD and AD administered. Exploratory analysis with select medications showed reductions in frequency of alerts fired and overridden.ConclusionsUtilization of a passive CDS positively influences prescribing patterns for older adults and reduces the alert burden to ordering providers.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology

Reference27 articles.

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2. ElixhauserA OwensP.Adverse Drug Events in US Hospitals.2004. Accessed March 20 2022.https://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov/reports/statbriefs/sb29

3. American Geriatrics Society 2019 Updated AGS Beers Criteria® for Potentially Inappropriate Medication Use in Older Adults

4. Defining "elderly" in clinical practice guidelines for pharmacotherapy

5. Delirium in Hospitalized Older Patients: Recognition and Risk Factors

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