Author:
Tapaskar Natalie,Kilaru Megha,Puri Tipu S,Martin Shannon K,Edstrom Eve,Leung Edward,Ahmed Farah,Kondo Ryuhei,Norenberg Allison,Poli Elizabeth,Arora Vineet M
Abstract
We assessed the effectiveness of a quality improvement
project to reduce routine labs in clinically stable patients,
while also promoting sleep-friendly lab timing. The electronic
health record was modified with an “Order Sleep” shortcut
to facilitate sleep-friendly lab draws. A “4 am Labs” column
was added to electronic patient lists to signal which patients
had early morning labs ordered. Among 7,045 patients
over 50,951 total patient-days, on average we observed
26.3% fewer routine lab draws per patient-day per week
postintervention (4.68 before vs 3.45 after; difference,
1.23; 95% CI, 0.82-1.63; P < .05). In interrupted time series
analysis, the “Order Sleep” tool was associated with a
significant increase in sleep-friendly lab orders per encounter
per week on resident medicine services (intercept, 1.03;
standard error (SE), 0.29; P < .001). The “4 am Labs” column
was associated with a significant increase in sleep-friendly
lab orders per patient encounter per week on the hospitalist
medical service (intercept, 1.17; SE, 0.50; P = .02). We
demonstrate the success of an initiative to simultaneously
reduce daily labs and improve sleep-friendly ordering.
Journal of Hospital Medicine 2020;15:XXX-XXX. © 2020
Society of Hospital Medicine
Subject
Assessment and Diagnosis,Care Planning,Health Policy,Fundamentals and skills,General Medicine,Leadership and Management
Cited by
9 articles.
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