| Literature DB >> 20958955 |
Kirsten Colpaert1, Sem Vanbelleghem, Christian Danneels, Dominique Benoit, Kristof Steurbaut, Sofie Van Hoecke, Filip De Turck, Johan Decruyenaere.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Information technology (IT) may improve the quality, safety and efficiency of medicine, and is especially useful in intensive Care Units (ICUs) as these are extremely data-rich environments with round-the-clock changing parameters. However, data regarding the implementation rates of IT in ICUs are scarce, and restricted to non-European countries. The current paper aims to provide relevant information regarding implementation of IT in Flemish ICU's (Flanders, Belgium).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20958955 PMCID: PMC2967500 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6947-10-62
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ISSN: 1472-6947 Impact factor: 2.796
Figure 1Implementation and usage rate of general IT components within the ICU. Medication CPOE = medication prescription by computerized physician order entry; Medication administr. recording = computerized recording of medication administration; Laboratory CPOE = computerized physician order entry of laboratory tests; Laboratory display = computerized display of laboratory results; Radiology CPOE = computerized physician order entry of radiology requests; Radiology display = computerized display of radiology images and/or protocol.
Number of ICIS implementations in 2005-2008
| 2005 (n = 54) | 2008 (n = 63) | |
|---|---|---|
| ICIS, n (%) | 5 (9.3%) | 12 (19.0%) |
| ICIS uptake <3 years, n (%) | 7 (13.0%) | 20 (31.7%) |
| No ICIS, n (%) | 42 (77.7%) | 31 (49.2%) |
ICIS: ICIS already implemented; ICIS uptake <3 yrs: intention of implementing ICIS within the next 3 years; no ICIS: no ICIS available or planned within the first 3 years.
Figure 2Implementation rate of ICIS as a function of the type of hospital. Tertiary non-acad. Hospital: Tertiary non-academic Hospital
Implementation rate of different commercial ICISs in Flemish ICUs.
| Product | Vendor | n |
|---|---|---|
| Centricity™ Critical Care | GE Healthcare IT | 3 |
| ICM | Dräger | 1 |
| ICIP Critical Care/Care Vue Chart | Philips | 3 |
| MetaVision® Clinical Information System | iMD | 3 |
| Picis Critical Care Manager | Picis | 1 |
| QCare ICU | Critical Care Company (C3) | 1 |
Main anticipated benefits of switching from paper charting to an ICIS
| 1. Automatic compact archiving; |
| 2. Improved exchange of information between the different caregivers; |
| 3. More complete and automatic data acquisition; |
| 4. Higher quality of care with prevention of errors, in the first place medication errors; |
| 5. Automatic calculation of scores and support for coding (e.g. APACHE II, SOFA, SAPS, TISS); |
| 6. Automatic reporting and automatic generation of discharge documents; |
| 7. Data extraction possibilities. |
APACHE II: Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II; SOFA: Sequential Organ Failure Assessment; SAPS: simplified acute physiology score; TISS: Therapeutic Intervention Scoring System
Main drawbacks to buying an ICIS
| 1. Financial cost for initial implementation, maintenance and upgrading; |
| 2. The need for dedicated IT personnel for configuration and end-user training; |
| 3. Integration with the hospital information system; |
| 4. Reliability; |
| 5. Confidentiality issues; |
| 6. Need for infrastructure adaptations. |