An interrupted time series study of electronic health record clinical decision support for providers caring for patients with atrial fibrillation at increased stroke risk

Author:

Osterland Andrew J1,Yasuda Marie1,Widmer Robert J1,Colavecchia Anthony C2,Gums Tyler2,Emir Birol2,Nolen Kim2,MacLean Elizabeth2,Godley Paul J1

Affiliation:

1. Baylor Scott & White Health , Temple, TX , USA

2. Pfizer Inc. , New York, NY , USA

Abstract

Abstract Purpose To measure the effect of clinical decision support (CDS) on anticoagulation rates in patients with atrial fibrillation (AFib) or atrial flutter (AFlut) at high stroke risk and receiving care in outpatient settings, and to assess provider response to CDS. Methods This observational, quasi-experimental, interrupted time series study utilized electronic health record data at a large integrated delivery network in Texas from April to November 2020. CDS consisted of an electronic Best Practice Advisory (BPA)/alert (Epic Systems Corporation, Verona, WI) with links to 2 AFib order sets displayed to providers in outpatient settings caring for non-anticoagulated patients with AFib and elevated CHA2DS2VASc scores. Weekly outpatient anticoagulation rates were assessed in patients with high stroke risk before and after implementation of CDS. Alert actions and acknowledgment reasons were evaluated descriptively. Results Mean (SD) weekly counts of eligible patients were 8,917 (566) before and 8,881 (811) after implementation. Weekly anticoagulation rates increased during the pre-BPA study period (β1 = 0.07%; SE, 0.02%; P = 0.0062); however, there were no significant changes in the level (β2 = 0.60%; SE, 0.42%; P = 0.1651) or trend (β3 = –0.01%; SE, 0.05%; P = 0.8256) of anticoagulation rates associated with CDS implementation. In encounters with the BPA/alert displayed (n = 17,654), acknowledgment reasons were provided in 4,473 (25.3%) of the encounters, with prescribers most commonly citing bleeding risk (n = 1,327, 7.5%) and fall risk (n = 855, 4.8%). Conclusion There was a significant trend of increasing anticoagulation rates during the pre-BPA period, with no significant change in trend during the post-BPA period relative to the pre-BPA period.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Health Policy,Pharmacology

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