Advancing health information during interhospital transfer: An interrupted time series

Author:

Mueller Stephanie K.12ORCID,Garabedian Pamela3,Goralnick Eric24,Bates David W.12,Samal Lipika12

Affiliation:

1. Division of General Internal Medicine and Primary Care Brigham and Women's Hospital Boston Massachusetts USA

2. Harvard Medical School Boston Massachusetts USA

3. Mass General Brigham Boston Massachusetts USA

4. Department of Emergency Medicine Brigham and Women's Hospital Boston Massachusetts USA

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionAlthough the transfer of patients between acute care hospitals (interhospital transfer, IHT) is common, health information exchange (HIE) during IHT remains inadequate, with fragmented communication and unreliable access to clinical information. This study aims to design, implement, and rigorously evaluate the implementation of a HIE platform to improve data access during IHT.Methods and AnalysisStudy subjects include patients aged >18 transferred to the medical, cardiology, oncology, or intensive care unit (ICU) services at an 800‐bed quaternary care hospital; and healthcare workers involved in their care. The first aim of this study is to optimize clinician workflow, data visualization, and interoperability through user‐centered design sessions for HIE platform development. The second aim is to evaluate the impact of the intervention on clinician‐reported medical errors among 500 pre‐ and 500 postintervention IHT patients using interrupted time series methodology, adjusting for confounding variables and temporal trends. The third aim is to evaluate intervention fidelity, use and perceived usability of the platform, and barriers and facilitators of implementation from interprofessional stakeholder input, using mixed‐methods evaluation. The fourth aim is to consolidate key findings to create a toolkit for spread and sustainability.Ethics and DisseminationWe will track patient safety endpoints and clinician workflow burdens and ensure the protection of patient data throughout the study. We will disseminate our findings via the creation of a toolkit for spread and sustainability, partnering with our funder (AHRQ) for dissemination, and communicating our results via abstracts and publications.

Funder

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Assessment and Diagnosis,Care Planning,Health Policy,Fundamentals and skills,General Medicine,Leadership and Management

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