Impact of an electronic health record alert on inappropriate prescribing of high-risk medications to patients with concurrent “do not give” orders

Author:

Smith Kirsten12,Durant Karin M12,Zimmerman Chris34

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmacy Services and Clinical Pharmacy, Michigan Medicine , Ann Arbor, MI

2. University of Michigan College of Pharmacy , Ann Arbor, MI , USA

3. University of Michigan College of Pharmacy , Ann Arbor, MI

4. Department of Health Information Technology & Services, Michigan Medicine , Ann Arbor, MI , USA

Abstract

AbstractPurposeTo evaluate the effectiveness of clinical decision support (CDS) alerts tied to high-risk medications at a Michigan health system by determining the true prescriber action rate in response to select “do not give” (DNG) alerts.MethodsA retrospective review of prescriber actions in response to CDS alerts was conducted to evaluate the effectiveness of alerts designed to prevent prescribing of high-risk medications to patients with concurrent DNG orders. The primary endpoint was the overall action rate, determined by totaling orders cancelled within the alert display and orders modified shortly after an alert. The overall action rate was hypothesized to significantly exceed the action rate estimated on the basis of alert overrides alone. Following the initial review, changes were made to the alert format and preset documentation choices (“acknowledgement comments”), and it was hypothesized that these changes would increase the overall action rate. A repeat analysis was conducted to evaluate the impact of these changes.ResultsAcross a total of 506 CDS alerts over 14 months, 78% resulted in prescribers modifying orders to comply with alert recommendations. Prescribers cancelled orders in response to only 26% of alerts, often overriding alerts prior to modifying orders. Documentation of rationale or approval for overrides was inconsistent, and while requiring acknowledgement comments facilitated documentation of prescriber rationale, it did not consistently improve overall action rates.ConclusionThese findings demonstrate that override rates alone are not good markers for the true effectiveness of CDS alerts and support the need for frequent evaluation of alerts at the institutional level. CDS alerts remain a valuable tool to prevent inappropriate prescribing of high-risk medications and for promoting patient safety.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Health Policy,Pharmacology

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3. Effectiveness of best practice alerts for potentially inappropriate medication orders in older adults in the ambulatory setting;Ota;Perm J,2020

4. Effectiveness of a best practice alerts at improving hypertension control;Swedlund;Am J Hypertens,2019

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