I've previously written about the importance of Inpatient and Outpatient Decision Support.
Yesterday, I joined an expert panel on Clinical Decision Support, hosted by Dr. David Bates at Partners. Part of this multidisciplinary effort is to review the clinical reminders that institutions have implemented in their electronic health records. The definition of a reminder is that a non-urgent notice appears on the EHR patient summary screen and the clinician's schedule. Reminders are suggestions for clinicians to follow so that best practice guidelines are followed. An alert, by contrast, is an urgent issue which must be escalated immediately. Alerts at BIDMC include such issues as critical lab values or a notice that a patient has been hospitalized. Here are the reminders in use today at BIDMC:
Mammogram
Women 40 and over: yearly
Pap Smear
All women: annually
Influenza Vaccine
Children under 2
Adults 50 and over
Patients with diabetes
Pneumovax
Children under 5 (PCV): 3 doses,
alert for each dose when due
Adults 65 and over (PPV): once
Patients with diabetes (PPV): once
Tetanus (Td)
Adults: Every ten years
Prostate Specific Antigen
Men 50 and over: yearly
Colonoscopy
Adults 50 and over: every 10 years
Bone Mineral Density
Women 65 and over: once
Health Care Proxy
All patients who do not have one on file
For HIV-patients only:
Ophthalmologist, H. Flu Vaccine, PPD, Baseline Labs
I look forward to working with this expert panel and broadly sharing the clinical reminders from all of our institutions.
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4 comments:
Hi,
I am typically a lurker on your blog, but I enjoy it very much.
You might consider reaching out to a programmer or CAC from a local VA hospital to join your group. VistA is reputed to have one of the most robust and capable Clinical Reminders system available. So much work has going into it, that I have often considered how to try and get some of its functionality extracted into other simpler FOSS EHR projects.
I understand that the VA has deployed Clinical Reminders system wide for years and if you are looking for experiences on that level, you should probably ping Hardhats to figure out who is responsible for the system on that level.
HTH,
-FT
Seems like the perfect stuff for PHR's as well. Reminding the patient to ask the doctor.
We've done a similar thing for adults with diabetes in Vermont. Using laboratory values as triggers, we send reminders to both the providers and the patients (by first class mail). The result is a substantial increase in on-time testing.
I understand that the VA has deployed Clinical Reminders system wide for years and if you are looking for experiences on that level, you should probably ping Hardhats to figure out who is responsible for the system on that level.
Recep Deniz MD
DoktorTR.Net
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