| Literature DB >> 28913416 |
Matthew D Krasowski1, Bradley A Ford1, J Stacey Klutts1,2, Chris S Jensen1, Angela S Briggs1, Robert A Robinson1, Leslie A Bruch1, Nitin J Karandikar1.
Abstract
Training in patient safety, quality, and management is widely recognized as an important element of graduate medical education. These concepts have been intertwined in pathology graduate medical education for many years, although training programs face challenges in creating explicit learning opportunities in these fields. Tangibly involving pathology residents in management and quality improvement projects has the potential to teach and reinforce key concepts and further fulfill Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education goals for pursuing projects related to patient safety and quality improvement. In this report, we present our experience at a pathology residency program (University of Iowa) in engaging pathology residents in projects related to practical issues of laboratory management, process improvement, and informatics. In this program, at least 1 management/quality improvement project, typically performed during a clinical chemistry/management rotation, was required and ideally resulted in a journal publication. The residency program also initiated a monthly management/informatics series for pathology externs, residents, and fellows that covers a wide range of topics. Since 2010, all pathology residents at the University of Iowa have completed at least 1 management/quality improvement project. Many of the projects involved aspects of laboratory test utilization, with some projects focused on other areas such as human resources, informatics, or process improvement. Since 2012, 31 peer-reviewed journal articles involving effort from 26 residents have been published. Multiple projects resulted in changes in ongoing practice, particularly within the hospital electronic health record. Focused management/quality improvement projects involving pathology residents can result in both meaningful quality improvement and scholarly output.Entities:
Keywords: clinical laboratory information systems; data mining; graduate medical education; leadership; management; medical informatics; pathology education; quality improvement
Year: 2017 PMID: 28913416 PMCID: PMC5590695 DOI: 10.1177/2374289517722152
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acad Pathol ISSN: 2374-2895
Parameters for Pathology Resident Management/Quality Improvement Projects.
| Mandatory | Desired |
|---|---|
| Pathology resident completes Institutional Review Board (IRB) training | Present at local or national meeting |
| Data must be obtainable with reasonable effort | Publish in peer-reviewed journal |
| Outcome must be measurable | Multidisciplinary collaboration and interaction with other departments |
| Pathology resident must present findings at a pathology conference including clinical pathology morning report, anatomic pathology faculty meeting, and grand rounds (multiple residents may work on various aspects of a larger project but each must present their portion). |
Management Series Topics.
| Category | Example Topics |
|---|---|
| Informatics and scholarly productivity |
Mining data in the EHR and data warehouse Efficient use of PubMed and citation managers Designing scholarly projects Management of LIS projects |
| Legal and financial issues |
Common legal issues for physicians Contract negotiations Pathology finances CPT coding Hospital finances capital and operating budgets Benchmarking clinical laboratory operations |
| Leadership and personal development |
Work–life balance Microaggression Reading and responding to other people’s behavioral style Dealing with procrastination Identifying and managing conflict effectively Communication skills Giving, seeking, and receiving feedback Leadership skills Time management Professionalism |
| Role of pathologists |
Private practice pathology Management vignettes Pathologist role in managing laboratory test utilization Managing outpatient and point-of-care testing Outreach operations Effective management of blood product utilization Understanding and minimizing preanalytical errors Quality improvement within pathology Root cause analysis Six Sigma |
| Education |
Teaching in the integrated medical school curriculum Effective small group teaching Effective study techniques Seeking and using a mentor |
| Human resources issues |
Common human resources issues for pathologists Managing in a union environment |
| Regulatory and legislative issues |
Laboratory inspections Health-care reform and other legislative issues CLIA regulations |
| Other issues |
Genetic counseling; prenatal diagnosis |
Abbreviations: CLIA, Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments; CPT, Current Procedural Terminology; EHR, electronic health record; LIS, laboratory information systems.
Examples of Resident Management/Quality Improvement Projects.
| Topic | Number of Pathology Residents/Faculty | Outcome | Resident Role (See Key)* | Presented? | Publication(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anatomic pathology | |||||
| Comparison of molecular oncology performed on cytology specimens and FFPE tissue | 1/2 |
Cytology preparations reliable for molecular oncology | 1, 2, 4 | Yes |
[ |
| Accuracy of fine needle aspiration and imaging in salivary gland lesions | 1/1 |
Compared fine needle aspiration to imaging for salivary gland lesions | 1, 2, 4 | Yes |
[ |
| Workflow adjustments for gastrointestinal block use | 2/2 |
Cost savings and increased efficiency from change in workflow | 1, 2, 4 | Yes |
[ |
| Adequacy of powered versus manual bone marrow biopsies | 1/1 |
Manual method superior with respect to percentage and length of evaluable bone marrow | 2, 3 | Yes |
[ |
| Laboratory test utilization | |||||
| Improving utilization of laboratory tests (multiple projects) | 7/1 |
Restricted 170 expensive send-outs Multiple EHR interventions to prevent misorders | 2, 3 | Yes |
[ |
| Vitamin D ordering patterns | 2/1 |
Identified misordering of 1, 25-dihydroxyvitamin D Multiple EHR interventions put in place | 2, 3, 4 | Yes |
[ |
| Ordering of ACE level assay in patients on ACE inhibitor therapy | 1/1 |
Warning prompts and best-practice alert put into EHR (greatly reduced occurrences) | 2, 3 | Yes |
[ |
| Positive hepatitis B surface antigen tests due to recent vaccination | 1/1 |
Best-practice alert put into EHR (greatly reduced occurrences) | 2, 3, 4 | Yes |
[ |
| Clinical chemistry | |||||
| Validation of plasma as specimen for κ and λ free light chain analysis | 1/1 |
Validated plasma as acceptable specimen for κ and λ free light chain analysis | 1, 2, 3, 4 | Yes |
[ |
| Direct bilirubin methods | 1/1 |
Identified operational advantages of using vanadate oxidase compared to diazo methods | 2, 3, 4 | Yes |
[ |
| Myoglobin hook effect | 1/1 |
Published case report, updated laboratory procedure for myoglobin | 2, 3, 4 | No |
[ |
| Persistent hCG after methotrexate therapy for ectopic pregnancy | 1/1 |
Published case report, updated protocols for workup of “unexpected” elevated hCG | 2, 3, 4 | No |
[ |
| Interference of antibody assays by subcutaneous immunoglobulin | 1/2 |
Published case report | 2 | No |
[ |
| Informatics | |||||
| Autoverification of chemistry tests | 1/1 |
Identified opportunities to improve autoverification | 1, 2 | No |
[ |
| Informatics prediction of steroid immunoassay cross- reactivity | 1/2 |
Determined cross-reactivity of 5 steroid hormone immunoassays | 2, 4 |
[ | |
| Middleware interfacing and “hot keys” for electrophoresis sign-out | 1/2 |
Streamlined protein electrophoresis sign-out for pathology residents and faculty | 1, 2, 3, 4 | Yes |
[ |
| Use of data warehouse for pathology quality improvement | 2/2 |
Proof of concept for use of data warehouse for education, research, and quality improvement | 1, 2, 3, 4 | Yes |
[ |
| Toxicology and drug monitoring | |||||
| Toxic alcohols algorithm | 4/1 |
Revised osmolal gap calculation Validated and implemented rapid ethylene glycol assay (laboratory-developed test) | 2, 3, 4 | Yes |
[ |
| Meconium versus umbilical cord for newborn drug testing | 4/1 |
Collaborated with pediatrics to revise newborn drug testing criteria Switched to umbilical cord tissue as the main specimen for newborn drug testing | 2, 3, 4 | Yes |
[ |
| Hair and urine toxicology testing in suspected child abuse cases | 3/1 |
Affirmed protocol for hair toxicology testing Demonstrated low yield of urine drug testing | 2, 3, 4 | Yes |
[ |
| Therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) of pentobarbital | 1/1 |
Rapid assay for pentobarbital validated Affirmed value of TDM for pentobarbital Identified comment pre-and postanalytical errors in pentobarbital TDM | 1, 2, 3, 4 | Yes |
[ |
| Blood ethanol levels in the emergency department during university football games | 1/1 |
Demonstrated decrease in moderate to severe blood ethanol levels following university and city initiatives to reduce excessive ethanol use | 2, 3, 4 | Yes |
[ |
| Hematology and transfusion medicine | |||||
| Fetal lung maturity | 1/1 |
New laboratory-developed test validated and implemented in hematology | 2, 3 | No | No |
| OD450 assay | 1/1 |
Assay discontinued due to lack of clinical utility | 1, 2, 3 | Yes | No |
| Hematopoietic progenitor cell counts for stem cell transplants | 1/3 |
New assay validated in hematology | 1, 2, 3, 4 | Yes |
[ |
| Pathologist blood smear reviews | 1/2 |
Analyzed provider ordering of pathologist smear review Laboratory-initiated reviews already caught clinically significant findings | 2, 3, 4 | Yes | In review |
| Improving normovolemic hemodilution for Jehovah’s Witness patients | 1 |
Innovative use of device to limit blood loss | 2, 3, 4 | No |
[ |
| Other | |||||
| Syphilis testing algorithm | 1/2 |
Compared reverse with traditional syphilis algorithm | 2, 3, 4 | Yes |
[ |
| Recruitment and retention of clinical laboratory staff | 1/1 |
Identified areas for improvement and staff satisfaction and recruitment | 2 | Yes | No |
| Breast milk errors | 1/1 |
Modified protocol for infectious disease testing | 2 | No | No |
| Pathology considerations for the transgender patient population | 1/1 |
Collaborated with LGBTQ clinic leadership Published review article | 1, 2, 4 | No |
[ |
Abbreviations: ACE, angiotensin-converting enzyme; EHR, electronic health record; FFPE, formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded; hCG, human chorionic gonadotropin; LGBTQ, lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer/questioning; TDM, therapeutic drug monitoring.
*Key for resident involvement in project: 1, extracted data from electronic health record (EHR), laboratory information system (LIS), or other source (eg, middleware, data warehouse); 2, data analysis; 3, chart review; 4, drafted manuscript.
Figure 1.Examples of best-practice alerts in the electronic health record (EHR) to improve laboratory utilization.
Figure 2.Examples of warning prompts (requiring acknowledgment by ordering provider) in the electronic health record (EHR) to improve laboratory utilization.