A clinical trial comparing physician prompting with an unprompted automated electronic checklist to reduce empirical antibiotic utilization.
Crit Care Med
; 41(11): 2563-9, 2013 Nov.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-23939354
OBJECTIVES: To determine whether face-to-face prompting of critical care physicians reduces empirical antibiotic utilization compared to an unprompted electronic checklist embedded within the electronic health record. DESIGN: Random allocation design. SETTING: Medical ICU with high-intensity intensivist coverage at a tertiary care urban medical center. PATIENTS: Two hundred ninety-six critically ill patients treated with at least 1 day of empirical antibiotics. INTERVENTIONS: For one medical ICU team, face-to-face prompting of critical care physicians if they did not address empirical antibiotic utilization during a patient's daily rounds. On a separate medical ICU team, attendings and fellows were trained once to complete an electronic health record-embedded checklist daily for each patient, including a question asking whether listed empirical antibiotics could be discontinued. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Prompting led to a more than four-fold increase in discontinuing or narrowing of empirical antibiotics compared to use of the electronic checklist. Prompted group patients had a lower proportion of patient-days on which empirical antibiotics were administered compared to electronic checklist group patients (63.1% vs 70.0%, p = 0.002). Mean proportion of antibiotic-days on which empirical antibiotics were used was also lower in the prompted group, although not statistically significant (0.78 [0.27] vs 0.83 [0.27], p = 0.093). Each additional day of empirical antibiotics predicted higher risk-adjusted mortality (odds ratio, 1.14; 95% CI, 1.05-1.23). Risk-adjusted ICU length of stay and hospital mortality were not significantly different between the two groups. CONCLUSIONS: Face-to-face prompting was superior to an unprompted electronic health record-based checklist at reducing empirical antibiotic utilization. Sustained culture change may have contributed to the electronic checklist having similar empirical antibiotic utilization to a prompted group in the same medical ICU 2 years prior. Future studies should investigate the integration of an automated prompting mechanism with a more generalizable electronic health record-based checklist.
Texto completo:
1
Coleções:
01-internacional
Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Assunto principal:
Cuidados Críticos
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Uso de Medicamentos
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Registros Eletrônicos de Saúde
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Lista de Checagem
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Antibacterianos
Tipo de estudo:
Clinical_trials
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Prognostic_studies
Limite:
Adult
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Aged
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Aged80
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Female
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Humans
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Male
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Middle aged
Idioma:
En
Revista:
Crit Care Med
Ano de publicação:
2013
Tipo de documento:
Article