Literature DB >> 10807824

Implementation of admission decision support for community-acquired pneumonia.

N C Dean1, M R Suchyta, K A Bateman, D Aronsky, C J Hadlock.   

Abstract

STUDY
OBJECTIVES: Considerable variation exists in hospital admission rates for patients with community-acquired pneumonia. Logic to determine need for admission has been proposed by several authors. We compared Intermountain Health Care pneumonia guideline recommendations for inpatient vs outpatient care with actual physician decision making and clinical outcomes before vs after implementation. A secondary objective was to determine whether the pneumonia severity index predicts need for admission in this population.
DESIGN: Prospective study after implementation vs historic controls.
SETTING: Four ambulatory, urgent-care facilities. PATIENTS: Four hundred sixty-three immunocompetent adults with radiographically confirmed community-acquired pneumonia. INTERVENTION: A pneumonia practice guideline including decision support logic was implemented for a 12-month period. MEASUREMENTS AND
RESULTS: After implementation, physicians used the pneumonia guideline form in 90% of cases. The percentage of patients admitted within 30 days decreased from 13.6% to 6.4% (p = 0.01). Only five patients before (2.5%) and three patients after (1.1%, p = 0.3) guideline implementation required subsequent hospital admission within 30 days after initial outpatient treatment. Only two deaths occurred in the study cohort, both outpatients before implementation. The positive predictive value was 14.4%, and the negative predictive value for admission was 98.8% after guideline implementation. Guideline recommendation for admission was more likely to be followed in patients with more risk factors and hypoxemia.
CONCLUSIONS: Decreased admission rate was observed after implementation of admission decision support in combination with specific recommendations for outpatient antibiotic therapy. Favorable outpatient outcomes suggest that implementation of decision support was safe.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2000        PMID: 10807824     DOI: 10.1378/chest.117.5.1368

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Chest        ISSN: 0012-3692            Impact factor:   9.410


  11 in total

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2.  Infectious Diseases Society of America/American Thoracic Society consensus guidelines on the management of community-acquired pneumonia in adults.

Authors:  Lionel A Mandell; Richard G Wunderink; Antonio Anzueto; John G Bartlett; G Douglas Campbell; Nathan C Dean; Scott F Dowell; Thomas M File; Daniel M Musher; Michael S Niederman; Antonio Torres; Cynthia G Whitney
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3.  Modern Management of Community-Acquired Pneumonia: Is It Cost-Effective and are Outcomes Acceptable?

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Authors:  P B O'Donohoe; R Kessler; T F Beattie
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6.  Hospital admission decision for patients with community-acquired pneumonia: variability among physicians in an emergency department.

Authors:  Nathan C Dean; Jason P Jones; Dominik Aronsky; Samuel Brown; Caroline G Vines; Barbara E Jones; Todd Allen
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7.  Automatic identification of patients eligible for a pneumonia guideline.

Authors:  D Aronsky; P J Haug
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8.  CDS in a Learning Health Care System: Identifying Physicians' Reasons for Rejection of Best-Practice Recommendations in Pneumonia through Computerized Clinical Decision Support.

Authors:  Barbara E Jones; Dave S Collingridge; Caroline G Vines; Herman Post; John Holmen; Todd L Allen; Peter Haug; Charlene R Weir; Nathan C Dean
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9.  Limited impact of a multicenter intervention to improve the quality and efficiency of pneumonia care.

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Journal:  Chest       Date:  2004-07       Impact factor: 9.410

10.  Reduction of pediatric emergency hospital admissions by a change in pediatric emergency department policy.

Authors:  Marzouq A Alazmi; Ahmed F Elhassanien
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