Prognostic clinical decision support for pneumonia in the emergency department: A randomized trial

Author:

Williams Derek J.1ORCID,Nian Hui1,Suresh Srinivasan2ORCID,Slagle Jason1,Gradwohl Stephen1,Johnson Jakobi1,Stassun Justine1ORCID,Reale Carrie1,Just Shari L.1,Rixe Nancy S.2,Beebe Russ1,Arnold Donald H.1ORCID,Turer Robert W.3,Antoon James W.1ORCID,Sartori Laura F.4,Freundlich Robert E.1,Grijalva Carlos G.1,Smith Joshua C.1,Weitkamp Asli O.1,Weinger Matthew B.1,Zhu Yuwei1,Martin Judith M.2

Affiliation:

1. Vanderbilt University Medical Center Nashville Tennessee USA

2. University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

3. UT Southwestern Medical Center Dallas Texas USA

4. Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundHospitalization rates for childhood pneumonia vary widely. Risk‐based clinical decision support (CDS) interventions may reduce unwarranted variation.MethodsWe conducted a pragmatic randomized trial in two US pediatric emergency departments (EDs) comparing electronic health record (EHR)‐integrated prognostic CDS versus usual care for promoting appropriate ED disposition in children (<18 years) with pneumonia. Encounters were randomized 1:1 to usual care versus custom CDS featuring a validated pneumonia severity score predicting risk for severe in‐hospital outcomes. Clinicians retained full decision‐making authority. The primary outcome was inappropriate ED disposition, defined as early transition to lower‐ or higher‐level care. Safety and implementation outcomes were also evaluated.ResultsThe study enrolled 536 encounters (269 usual care and 267 CDS). Baseline characteristics were similar across arms. Inappropriate disposition occurred in 3% of usual care encounters and 2% of CDS encounters (adjusted odds ratio: 0.99, 95% confidence interval: [0.32, 2.95]). Length of stay was also similar and adverse safety outcomes were uncommon in both arms. The tool's custom user interface and content were viewed as strengths by surveyed clinicians (>70% satisfied). Implementation barriers include intrinsic (e.g., reaching the right person at the right time) and extrinsic factors (i.e., global pandemic).ConclusionsEHR‐based prognostic CDS did not improve ED disposition decisions for children with pneumonia. Although the intervention's content was favorably received, low subject accrual and workflow integration problems likely limited effectiveness. Clinical Trials Registration: NCT06033079.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences

Publisher

Wiley

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