Idea - Patient Safety and the Value of E-Prescribing Alerts
here is another idea related to pt safety.
From iHealthbeat March 9, 2009
Study Raises Questions About Value of E-Prescribing Alerts
Clinicians bypassed more than 90% of the drug interaction alerts and 77% of the drug allergy alerts sent by their electronic prescribing systems, according to a study in the Archives of Internal Medicine, Healthcare IT News reports.
Study Details
Investigators at Boston's Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center looked at the electronic prescriptions and the related medication safety alerts produced by 2,872 clinicians at community-based outpatient practices in Massachusetts, New Jersey and Pennsylvania.
The clinicians submitted 3.5 million e-prescriptions between Jan.1 and Sept. 30, 2006.
About one in 15 prescription orders, or 6.6%, triggered an alert for a drug interaction or drug allergy. Of the 233,537 alerts, 98.6% were for a potential interaction with a drug a patient already had been prescribed.
Findings, Recommendations
According to the study, physicians typically disregarded even high-severity alerts triggered from medication combinations commonly used for specific diseases.
In addition, the study suggested that clinicians were less likely to accept an alert if the patient had previously been treated with the medication.
Based on their findings, researchers recommended:
Recategorizing the severity of alerts, particularly those that are frequently bypassed;
Offering an option that will allow physicians to ignore alerts for medications a patient already takes; and
Aligning the alerts to a physician's specialty (Merrill, Healthcare IT News, 3/9).
Comments
Saul Weingart, co-author of the study, said the study's results indicate that electronic alerts are not well tailored for all clinical circumstances, rather than suggesting that physicians are irresponsibly ignoring medication warnings.
He said, "If doctors are overriding 90% of alerts, of the 10% they're accepting, what's the chance that those led to improvement in care and in turn prevented health care utilization to save money?" (O'Reilly, American Medical News, 3/9).
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