Impact of an Intervention to Reduce Bronchodilator Use in Bronchiolitis – A Time Series Analysis

Author:

Lawrence Joanna1234,Hiscock Harriet23,Voskoboynik Alice4,Walpola Ramesh5,Sharma Anurag5

Affiliation:

1. aElectronic Medical Record Team, Royal Children’s Hospital, Melbourne, Australia

2. bHealth Services and Economics Group, Murdoch Children’s Research Institute, Melbourne, Australia

3. cDepartment of Paediatrics, University of Melbourne, Australia

4. dCentre for Health Analytics, Melbourne, Australia

5. eSchool of Population Health, Faculty of MedicineUniversity of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES International guidelines recommend against the use of bronchodilators in bronchiolitis. Despite attempts to address low value care practices in pediatrics, the literature is still evolving regarding which interventions are most effective in low value care reduction. We aim to assess the impact of a multifaceted intervention on rates of bronchodilator prescription in bronchiolitis. METHODS With electronic medical record (EMR) data over a 76- month period, we evaluated changes in bronchodilator prescription among infants aged 1 to 12 months diagnosed with bronchiolitis, using interrupted time series analysis, controlling for preintervention prescribing trends. The setting was the emergency department of a large teaching pediatric hospital. The intervention included education, clinician audit-feedback, and an EMR alert, implemented February 2019. The main outcome measure was rate of bronchodilator prescription per month. RESULTS There were 9576 infants, aged 1 to 12 months, diagnosed in the emergency department with bronchiolitis over the study period. Bronchodilator ordering reduced from 6.9% to 3.2% after the intervention. Once underlying trends were accounted for, the multifaceted intervention was associated with a reduction in the rate of prescribing (inter-rater reliability 0.98, 95% confidence interval 0.96 to 0.99, P = .037). CONCLUSIONS We found that the multifaceted intervention, including an EMR alert, may be an effective method of reducing low value care prescribing in bronchiolitis, accelerating the reduction of unnecessary care and supporting sustainable change.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics,General Medicine,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

Reference24 articles.

1. Medscape’s response to the Institute of Medicine Report: crossing the quality chasm: a new health system for the 21st century;Leavitt;MedGenMed,2001

2. Bronchodilators for bronchiolitis;Gadomski;Cochrane Database Syst Rev,2014

3. NICE clinical guideline: bronchiolitis in children;Caffrey Osvald;Arch Dis Child Educ Pract Ed,2016

4. Evaluation of national guidelines for bronchiolitis: AGREEments and controversies;Cavaye;J Paediatr Child Health,2019

5. Australasian bronchiolitis guideline;O’Brien;J Paediatr Child Health,2019

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