Visualizing Opioid-Use Variation in a Pediatric Perioperative Dashboard

Author:

Safranek Conrad W.1,Feitzinger Lauren2,Joyner Alice Kate Cummings2,Woo Nicole23,Smith Virgil2,Souza Elizabeth De4,Vasilakis Christos5,Anderson Thomas Anthony4,Fehr James4,Shin Andrew Y.6,Scheinker David2,Wang Ellen4,Xie James4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology: Computational Biology, Stanford University, Stanford, United States

2. Department of Management Science and Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, United States

3. Department of Computer Science, Stanford University, Stanford, United States

4. Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California, United States

5. Bath Centre for Healthcare Innovation and Improvement, School of Management, Centre for Healthcare Innovation and Improvement, University of Bath, Bath, United Kingdom

6. Department of Pediatrics—Cardiology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California, United States

Abstract

Abstract Background Anesthesiologists integrate numerous variables to determine an opioid dose that manages patient nociception and pain while minimizing adverse effects. Clinical dashboards that enable physicians to compare themselves to their peers can reduce unnecessary variation in patient care and improve outcomes. However, due to the complexity of anesthetic dosing decisions, comparative visualizations of opioid-use patterns are complicated by case-mix differences between providers. Objectives This single-institution case study describes the development of a pediatric anesthesia dashboard and demonstrates how advanced computational techniques can facilitate nuanced normalization techniques, enabling meaningful comparisons of complex clinical data. Methods We engaged perioperative-care stakeholders at a tertiary care pediatric hospital to determine patient and surgical variables relevant to anesthesia decision-making and to identify end-user requirements for an opioid-use visualization tool. Case data were extracted, aggregated, and standardized. We performed multivariable machine learning to identify and understand key variables. We integrated interview findings and computational algorithms into an interactive dashboard with normalized comparisons, followed by an iterative process of improvement and implementation. Results The dashboard design process identified two mechanisms—interactive data filtration and machine-learning-based normalization—that enable rigorous monitoring of opioid utilization with meaningful case-mix adjustment. When deployed with real data encompassing 24,332 surgical cases, our dashboard identified both high and low opioid-use outliers with associated clinical outcomes data. Conclusion A tool that gives anesthesiologists timely data on their practice patterns while adjusting for case-mix differences empowers physicians to track changes and variation in opioid administration over time. Such a tool can successfully trigger conversation amongst stakeholders in support of continuous improvement efforts. Clinical analytics dashboards can enable physicians to better understand their practice and provide motivation to change behavior, ultimately addressing unnecessary variation in high impact medication use and minimizing adverse effects.

Publisher

Georg Thieme Verlag KG

Subject

Health Information Management,Computer Science Applications,Health Informatics

Reference30 articles.

1. APA national audit of pediatric opioid infusions;N S Morton;Paediatr Anaesth,2010

2. Nurse-controlled analgesia (NCA) following major surgery in 10,000 patients in a children's hospital;R F Howard;Paediatr Anaesth,2010

3. Good practice in postoperative and procedural pain management, 2nd ed;Association of Paediatric Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland;Paediatr Anaesth,2012

4. The Society for Pediatric Anesthesia recommendations for the use of opioids in children during the perioperative period;J P Cravero;Paediatr Anaesth,2019

5. High intraoperative opioid dose increases readmission risk in patients undergoing ambulatory surgery;D R Long;Br J Anaesth,2018

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