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2.
Appl Clin Inform ; 14(4): 684-692, 2023 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37648222

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The Enhancing Quality of Prescribing Practices for Older Veterans Discharged from the Emergency Department (EQUIPPED) program developed an audit and feedback health information technology (IT) solution with the intent to replace the in-person academic detailing service provided by the program. The EQUIPPED dashboard provides emergency department (ED) providers with a personalized view of their prescribing performance. OBJECTIVES: Here, we analyze the association between ED provider characteristics and viewership of the EQUIPPED dashboard, adding insight into strategies for addressing barriers to initial use. METHODS: We performed a retrospective analysis of EQUIPPED dashboard viewership among four Veterans Affairs (VA) EDs. We extracted quantitative data from user interaction logs to determine evidence of dashboard use. Provider characteristics and baseline potentially inappropriate medication (PIM) prescribing rate were extracted from the VA's Corporate Data Warehouse. Logistic regression was used to examine the association between dashboard use and provider characteristics. RESULTS: A total of 82 providers were invited to receive audit and feedback via the EQUIPPED dashboard. Among invited providers, 40 (48.7%) had evidence of at least 1 dashboard view during the 1-year feedback period. Adjusted analyses suggest that providers with a higher baseline PIM prescribing rate were more likely to use the dashboard (odds ratio [OR]: 1.22; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.01-1.47). Furthermore, providers at ED site D were more likely to use the dashboard in comparison to the other sites (OR: 9.99; 95% CI: 1.72-58.04) and reportedly had the highest site-level baseline PIM rate. CONCLUSION: Providers with lower PIM prescribing rates (i.e., <5%) receive communication from an integrated dashboard reminder system that they are "optimal prescribers" which may have discouraged initial attempts to view the dashboard. Site D had the highest baseline PIM rate, but further qualitative investigation is warranted to better understand why site D had the greatest users of the dashboard.


Subject(s)
Communication , Emergency Service, Hospital , Humans , Feedback , Retrospective Studies , Patient Discharge
3.
Acad Emerg Med ; 30(4): 340-348, 2023 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36790188

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: The Enhancing the Quality of Prescribing Practices for Older Adults Discharged from the Emergency Department (EQUIPPED) medication safety program involves three core components including provider education, clinical decision support, and audit and feedback using the American Geriatrics Society Beers Criteria to determine potentially inappropriate medications (PIMs). This study evaluated implementation of audit and feedback through a centralized informatics-based dashboard compared to academic detailing delivered one on one by an EQUIPPED champion. METHODS: In a cluster-randomized study (October 2019-September 2021), eight VA emergency department (EDs) implemented either the academic detailing (n = 4) or the dashboard (n = 4) strategy for the audit and feedback component of EQUIPPED. The primary outcome was the monthly proportion of PIMs prescribed to Veterans 65 years or older at ED discharge. Poisson regression was used to evaluate the proportion of PIMs prescribed 6 months prior to EQUIPPED implementation compared to 12 months following implementation. RESULTS: Eight VA ED sites successfully implemented the EQUIPPED program. During the 6-month baseline period, the academic detailing and dashboard sites had similar PIM prescribing rates of 8.01% for academic detailing versus 8.04% for dashboard (p = 0.90). Comparing 12 months of prescribing data after EQUIPPED implementation, the academic detailing group significantly improved PIM prescribing (7.07%) compared to the dashboard group (8.10%; odds ratio 1.14, 95% confidence interval 1.08-1.22, p ≤ 0.0001). Within the groups, two of the four academic detailing sites demonstrated statistically significant reductions in PIM prescribing. One of the four dashboard sites achieved nearly 50% relative reduction in PIM prescribing. CONCLUSIONS: Eight VA EDs successfully implemented the core components of the EQUIPPED program amid the unprecedented challenges posed by the COVID-19 pandemic. While the academic detailing approach to EQUIPPED audit and feedback was more effective at the group level to improve safe prescribing for older Veterans discharged from the ED, the trial suggests that dashboard-based audit and feedback is a reasonable strategy in resource-limited settings.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Inappropriate Prescribing , Humans , United States , Aged , Quality Improvement , Feedback , Pandemics
4.
BMJ Open Qual ; 10(4)2021 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34750188

ABSTRACT

Enhancing quality of prescribing practices for older adults discharged from the Emergency Department (EQUIPPED) aims to reduce the monthly proportion of potentially inappropriate medications (PIMs) prescribed to older adults discharged from the ED to 5% or less. We describe prescribing outcomes at three academic health systems adapting and sequentially implementing the EQUIPPED medication safety programme.EQUIPPED was adapted from a model developed in the Veterans Health Administration (VA) and sequentially implemented in one academic health system per year over a 3-year period. The monthly proportion of PIMs, as defined by the 2015 American Geriatrics Beers Criteria, of all medications prescribed to adults aged 65 years and older at discharge was assessed for 6 months preimplementation until 12 months postimplementation using a generalised linear time series model with a Poisson distribution.The EQUIPPED programme was translated from the VA health system and its electronic medical record into three health systems each using a version of the Epic electronic medical record. Adaptation occurred through local modification of order sets and in the generation and delivery of provider prescribing reports by local champions. Baseline monthly PIM proportions 6 months prior to implementation at the three sites were 5.6% (95% CI 5.0% to 6.3%), 5.8% (95% CI 5.0% to 6.6%) and 7.3% (95% CI 6.4% to 9.2%), respectively. Evaluation of monthly prescribing including the twelve months post-EQUIPPED implementation demonstrated significant reduction in PIMs at one of the three sites. In exploratory analyses, the proportion of benzodiazepine prescriptions decreased across all sites from approximately 17% of PIMs at baseline to 9.5%-12% postimplementation, although not all reached statistical significance.EQUIPPED is feasible to implement outside the VA system. While the impact of the EQUIPPED model may vary across different health systems, results from this initial translation suggest significant reduction in specific high-risk drug classes may be an appropriate target for improvement at sites with relatively low baseline PIM prescribing rates.


Subject(s)
Inappropriate Prescribing , Potentially Inappropriate Medication List , Aged , Emergency Service, Hospital , Humans , Patient Discharge , United States
5.
Int J Qual Health Care ; 32(7): 470-476, 2020 Sep 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32671390

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: To present the three-site EQUIPPED academic health system research collaborative, which engaged in sequential implementation of the EQUIPPED medication safety program, as a learning health system; to understand how the organizations worked together to build resources for program scale-up. DESIGN: Following the Replicating Effective Programs framework, we analyzed content from implementation teams' focus groups, local and cross-site meeting minutes and sites' organizational profiles to develop an implementation package. SETTING: Three academic emergency departments that each implemented EQUIPPED over three successive years. PARTICIPANTS: Implementation team members at each site participating in focus groups (n = 18), local meetings during implementation years, and cross-site meetings during all years of the projects. INTERVENTION(S): EQUIPPED provides Emergency Department providers with clinical decision support (education, order sets, and feedback) to reduce prescribing of potentially inappropriate medications to adults aged 65 years and older who received a prescription at time of discharge. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Implementation process components assembled through successive implementation. RESULTS: Each site had clinical and environmental characteristics to be addressed in implementing the EQUIPPED program. We identified 10 process elements and describe lessons for each. Lessons guided the compilation of the EQUIPPED intervention package or toolkit, including the EQUIPPED logic model. CONCLUSIONS: Our academic health system research collaborative addressing medication safety through sequential implementation is a learning health system that can serve as a model for other quality improvement projects with multiple sites. The network produced an implementation package that can be vetted, piloted, evaluated, and finalized for large-scale dissemination in community-based settings.


Subject(s)
Learning Health System , Aged , Emergency Service, Hospital , Humans , Patient Discharge , Potentially Inappropriate Medication List , Quality Improvement
6.
Clin Ther ; 42(4): 592-604.e1, 2020 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32248998

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Beers List drugs are potentially harmful in older adults and are grouped by level of risk. Over 9000 total knee arthroplasties (TKAs) are performed each year Veterans Affairs (VA) hospitals, primarily on older adults. Minimal data on the administration of Beers List drugs following arthroplasty currently exists in the literature. Our goal was to quantify the risks of these drugs following TKA. We hypothesized that increasing doses of Beers List drugs would be associated with increased risks for readmission, reoperation, emergency department (ED) visits, and mortality. METHODS: In this retrospective cohort study, data from TKAs performed in VA hospitals from 2010 to 2014 were examined, with complicated or bilateral procedures excluded. The data were obtained from the VA Corporate Data Warehouse. The outcomes examined were readmission, postoperative ED visits, reoperation on ipsilateral knee, and mortality. Beers List drugs were divided into 3 categories: medications to use with caution (Beers 0); medications to avoid in older adults (Beers 1); and medications to avoid in certain disease states (Beers 2). Beers 2 was not included in the final analysis due to an inability to verify appropriate diagnostic criteria without manual chart review. Logistic regression was performed looking at the total number of doses in the first 48 h after surgery compared to the above-mentioned outcomes. FINDINGS: Data from 12,639 TKAs were analyzed; the mean age of the patients was 65.06 years, and 77.8% of patients received Beers List drugs while admitted. The most frequently administered Beers List drugs were proton pump inhibitors, NSAIDs, insulin, α-blockers, benzodiazepines, antihistamines, muscle relaxants, and antipsychotics. There was a dose-dependent increase in readmission and ED visits in the Beers 1 group. The odds ratios were 1.03 for 30-day readmission and 1.02 at 90 days. The odds ratios for ED visits were 1.05 for 72-h ED visits and 1.04 for ED visits within 7 and 30 days. The odds ratios were set at 1-unit dose intervals. All results were found after control for VA facility, sex, age, American Society of Anesthesiologists class, Charlson score, case length, and body mass index. IMPLICATIONS: The group of medications to avoid (Beers 1) from the 2015 Beers List showed associations with increased frequency of readmission and postoperative ED visits. Reinforcement of the need to avoid those drugs during surgical care will hopefully reduce such complications. Limitations included not controlling for overall discharge drug count and reliance on the outpatient problem list for outpatient diagnoses. Additional subgroup analysis will be performed to see whether specific drugs pose a higher than risk others.


Subject(s)
Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee , Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions/epidemiology , Potentially Inappropriate Medication List , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Emergency Service, Hospital , Female , Hospitals, Veterans , Humans , Inpatients , Male , Middle Aged , Odds Ratio , Patient Readmission , Retrospective Studies
7.
Clin Ther ; 42(4): 573-582, 2020 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32222360

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: The Enhancing Quality of Prescribing Practices for Older Veterans Discharged From the Emergency Department (EQUIPPED) program is a quality improvement initiative that combines education, clinical decision support (ie, geriatric pharmacy order sets), and in-person academic detailing coupled with audit and feedback in an effort to improve appropriate prescribing to older veterans discharged from the emergency department. Although the EQUIPPED program is effective at reducing the prescribing of potentially inappropriate medications, the reliance on in-person academic detailing may be a limitation for broader dissemination. The EQUIPPED dashboard is a passive yet continuous audit and feedback mechanism developed to potentially replace the in-person academic detailing of the traditional EQUIPPED program. We describe the development process of the EQUIPPED dashboard and the key audit and feedback components found within. METHODS: The Veterans Affairs (VA) Corporate Data Warehouse (CDW) serves as the underlying data source for the EQUIPPED dashboard. SQL Server Integration Services was used to build the backend data architecture. Data were isolated from the CDW for reporting purposes using an extract, load, transform (ELT) approach. The team used SQL Server Reporting Services to produce the user interface and add interactive functionality. The team used an agile development approach when designing the user interface, engaging end users at 2 VA EQUIPPED implementation sites by providing printed screenshots of a beta version of the dashboard. FINDINGS: The EQUIPPED dashboard ELT process executes nightly to provide dashboard end users with a near real-time data experience and the potential for daily audit and feedback. The following dashboard components were identified as necessary for the EQUIPPED dashboard to be a suitable audit and feedback tool: key performance indicators, peer-to-peer benchmarking, individual patient or encounter drill down, educational decision support, and longitudinal performance tracking. IMPLICATIONS: To our knowledge, the EQUIPPED dashboard is the first information display of its kind with built-in audit and feedback that has been developed for VA emergency department practitioners as the primary end users. Further investigation is warranted to determine whether the EQUIPPED dashboard is a suitable alternative to in-person academic detailing. The EQUIPPED dashboard will be leveraged in a formal implementation trial that will entail the randomization of multiple VA sites to either (1) traditional EQUIPPED with in-person academic detailing coupled with audit and feedback or (2) EQUIPPED with passive audit and feedback delivered through the EQUIPPED dashboard without in-person prescribing outreach.


Subject(s)
Inappropriate Prescribing/prevention & control , Pharmaceutical Services , Quality Improvement , Aged , Emergency Service, Hospital , Humans , Patient Discharge , Practice Patterns, Physicians' , Veterans
8.
J Gastrointest Oncol ; 10(5): 928-934, 2019 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31602331

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Midgut neuroendocrine tumor (NET) patients are often diagnosed at advanced stages with extensive mesenteric nodal and hepatic metastasis. The only potentially curative treatment is surgical tumor eradication. Despite an aggressive resection, macro and microscopic residual disease still may remain in the resection bed. We hypothesize that the application of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) within the tumor bed will help eliminate microscopic residual disease. METHODS: Records of 189 patients who underwent extensive cytoreductive surgeries during 2003-2012 for advanced, midgut NETs with extensive mesenteric lymphadenopathy were reviewed. Eighty-six patients (46%) who had 5-FU saturated gel foam strips secured into their mesenteric resection sites served as the study group and a matching 103 patients (54%) who did not have such an intra-operative chemotherapy served as controls. Survival from the time of diagnosis and post-operative complications between the two groups were compared. RESULTS: Mortality rates at 30, 60 and 90 days post-operatively were 4%, 0%, 0% versus 2%, 0%, 2% for study and control groups, respectively. Major complications (Grades III & IV) at the same intervals were 0, 0, 1 versus 2, 3, 2 for study and control groups, respectively. Median survival was 236 months versus 148 months for the study and control groups, respectively 24 (P=0.15). CONCLUSIONS: Intraoperative tumor resection bed chemotherapy is a safe adjuvant without discernible toxicity. This procedure may provide survival benefits to midgut NET patients with extensive mesenteric lymphadenopathy undergoing extensive cytoreductive surgery. Further study in prospective trials must be conducted to determine definitive benefit to the NET patient.

10.
Alzheimers Dement ; 15(1): 42-54, 2019 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30314799

ABSTRACT

Neurodegenerative diseases encompass a range of diagnoses, such as Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease. Despite decades of advancements in understanding the neurobiology of individual diseases, this class has few disease-modifying therapeutics and a paucity of biomarkers for diagnosis or progression. However, tau protein aggregation has emerged as a potential unifying factor across several neurodegenerative diseases, which has prompted a rapid growth in tau-related funding. In spite of this growth, research funding in this area is not in line with the immense magnitude of disease burden, and drug discovery and clinical research remain underfunded. Coordinated, collaborative efforts are key to making an impact, which can and should be led by the major funding bodies within the tau space. Here we describe the development and analysis of a tau-focused neurodegeneration funding database, which captures data from 2040 grants from 2006 to 2016. This database was developed as a public resource to allow funders, researchers, and policy makers to better understand tau funding patterns and to identify key funders and potential collaborations. This database can be used in conjunction with other neurodegenerative disease databases, such as the International Alzheimer's Disease Research Portfolio to gain specific insight into tau-research funding. Over the study period, overall tau funding rose dramatically; however, changes in capital distribution also changed. Specifically, the field experienced a strong bias toward funding tau in the context of Alzheimer's disease, while at the same time generally decreasing the overall proportion of funding for basic research, treatment development, and evaluation. As funding organizations look forward, this resource can both inform future funding strategies and priority areas and identify potential collaborative efforts with complementary funding organizations.


Subject(s)
Financing, Organized/economics , Research Support as Topic , Research/trends , Tauopathies , Alzheimer Disease/drug therapy , Biomarkers , Databases, Factual , Humans , Parkinson Disease/drug therapy
11.
J Pharm Pract ; 32(2): 167-174, 2019 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29277130

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the impact of an academic detailing intervention delivered as part of a quality improvement project by a physician-pharmacist pair on (1) self-reported confidence in prescribing for older adults and (2) rates of potentially inappropriate medications (PIMs) prescribed to older adults by physician residents in a Veteran Affairs emergency department (ED). METHODS: This quality improvement project at a single site utilized a questionnaire that assessed knowledge of Beers Criteria, self-perceived barriers to appropriate prescribing in older adults, and self-rated confidence in ability to prescribe in older adults which was administered to physician residents before and after academic detailing delivered during their emergency medicine rotation. PIM rates in the resident cohort who received the academic detailing were compared to residents who did not receive the intervention. RESULTS: Sixty-three residents received the intervention between February 2013 and December 2014. At baseline, approximately 50% of the residents surveyed reported never hearing about nor using the Beers Criteria. A significantly greater proportion of residents agreed or strongly agreed in their abilities to identify drug-disease interactions and to prescribe the appropriate medication for the older adult after receiving the intervention. The resident cohort who received the educational intervention was less likely to prescribe a PIM when compared to the untrained resident cohort with a rate ratio of 0.73 ( P < .0001). CONCLUSION: Academic detailing led by a physician-pharmacist pair resulted in improved confidence in physician residents' ability to prescribe safely in an older adult ED population and was associated with a statistically significant decrease in PIM rates.


Subject(s)
Education, Medical/methods , Inappropriate Prescribing/prevention & control , Inappropriate Prescribing/statistics & numerical data , Aged , Clinical Competence , Drug Prescriptions/statistics & numerical data , Education, Medical/standards , Emergency Medicine/statistics & numerical data , Emergency Service, Hospital/statistics & numerical data , Health Services for the Aged/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Internship and Residency/standards , Internship and Residency/statistics & numerical data , Interprofessional Relations , Physicians/statistics & numerical data , Potentially Inappropriate Medication List , Quality Improvement , Surveys and Questionnaires , United States , United States Department of Veterans Affairs , Veterans
12.
Nature ; 547(7662): 162, 2017 07 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28703197

Subject(s)
Foundations , Humans , Risk
13.
J Am Geriatr Soc ; 65(7): 1609-1614, 2017 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28388818

ABSTRACT

EQUiPPED is a multicomponent quality improvement initiative combining education, electronic clinical decision support, and individual provider feedback to influence prescribing and improve medication safety for older adults. The objective here was to evaluate the effectiveness and sustainability of EQUiPPED to reduce the use of potentially inappropriate medications (PIMs), as defined by the American Geriatrics Society 2012 Beers Criteria, prescribed to older Veterans at the time of emergency department (ED) discharge. This evaluation represents a pre- and post-intervention comparison of PIM prescriptions at 4 urban Veteran Affairs (VA) Medical Center EDs. Poisson regression was used to compare the number of PIMs prescribed to Veterans 65 years or older discharged from the ED for at least 6 months prior to the first EQUiPPED intervention at each site and for at least 12 months following the final EQUiPPED intervention. The implementation timeline varied by site depending on local resources. All 4 sites showed a significant and sustained reduction in use of PIMs. The proportion of PIMs at site one decreased from 11.9% (SD 1.8) pre-EQUiPPED to 5.1% (SD 1.4) post-EQUiPPED (P < .0001); site 2 from 8.2% (SD 0.8) pre to 4.5% (SD 1.0) post (P < .0001); site 3 from 8.9% (SD 1.9) pre to 6.1% (SD 1.7) post (P = .0007); and site 4 from 7.4% (SD 1.7) pre to 5.7% (SD 0.8) post (P = .04). These results suggest a multicomponent program to influence provider prescribing behavior leads to safer prescribing for older adults discharged from the ED and is sustainable across multiple VA ED sites.


Subject(s)
Emergency Service, Hospital , Geriatrics , Quality Improvement , Aged , Hospitals, Veterans/organization & administration , Humans , Inappropriate Prescribing/prevention & control , Patient Discharge , Potentially Inappropriate Medication List/statistics & numerical data , Veterans
15.
Epilepsy Behav ; 68: 174-176, 2017 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28213316

ABSTRACT

The Milken Institute Center for Strategic Philanthropy has launched a Giving Smarter Program in Epilepsy to inform philanthropists on the state of the science for the epilepsy field, key challenges, and solutions to address them. As part of the program, the Milken Institute Center for Strategic Philanthropy hosted a retreat to identify strategic investments that would accelerate epilepsy research to ultimately improve care. The top three prioritized opportunities from the retreat were to 1) invest in data standards and analytical tool development, 2) support young investigators, and 3) promote cross-sector collaborations especially between basic scientists, preclinical researchers, clinicians, and patients.


Subject(s)
Academies and Institutes , Epilepsy , Research , Cooperative Behavior , Humans
16.
Int J Qual Health Care ; 29(1): 117-123, 2017 Feb 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27852639

ABSTRACT

QUALITY PROBLEM OR ISSUE: Clinical decision support (CDS) may improve prescribing for older adults in the Emergency Department (ED) if adopted by providers. INITIAL ASSESSMENT: Existing prescribing order entry processes were mapped at an initial Veterans Administration Medical Center site, demonstrating cognitive burden, effort and safety concerns. CHOICE OF SOLUTION: Geriatric order sets incorporating 2012 Beers guidelines and including geriatric prescribing advice and prepopulated order options were developed. IMPLEMENTATION: Geriatric order sets were implemented at two sites as part of the multicomponent 'Enhancing Quality of Prescribing Practices for Older Veterans Discharged from the Emergency Department' quality improvement initiative. EVALUATION: Facilitators and barriers to order sets use at the two sites were evaluated. Phone interviews were conducted with two provider groups (n = 20), those 'EQUiPPED' with the interventions (n = 10, 5 at each site) and Comparison providers who were only exposed to order sets through a clickable option on the ED order menu within the patient's medical record (n = 10, 5 at each site). All providers were asked about order set 'use' and 'usefulness'. Users (n = 11) were asked about 'usability'. LESSONS LEARNED: Order set adopters described 'usefulness' in terms of 'safety' and 'efficiency', whereas order set consultants and order set non-users described 'usefulness' in terms of 'information' or 'training'. Provider 'autonomy', 'comfort' level with existing tools, and 'learning curve' were stated as barriers to use. CONCLUSIONS: Quantifying efficiency advantages and communicating safety benefit over preexisting practices and tools may improve adoption of CDS in ED and in other settings of care.


Subject(s)
Decision Support Systems, Clinical/statistics & numerical data , Drug Prescriptions , Emergency Service, Hospital , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Hospitals, Veterans , Humans , Quality Improvement
17.
Fed Pract ; 33(4): 29-33, 2016 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27773986

ABSTRACT

The Enhancing Quality of Prescribing Practices for Older Veterans Discharged From the Emergency Department (EQUiPPED) program aimed to reduce potentially inappropriate medication prescribing to older adults at 5 VAMCs.

18.
J Clin Anesth ; 32: 189-93, 2016 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27290972

ABSTRACT

STUDY OBJECTIVE: The prophylactic use of a preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative high-dose continuous octreotide acetate infusion was evaluated for its ability to minimize the incidence of carcinoid crises during neuroendocrine tumor (NET) cytoreductive surgeries. DESIGN: A retrospective study was approved by the institutional review boards at Ochsner Medical Center-Kenner and Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center. SETTING: Ochsner Medical Center-Kenner operating room and multispecialty NET clinic. PATIENTS: One hundred fifty consecutive patients who underwent a total of 179 cytoreductive surgeries for stage IV, small bowel NETs. INTERVENTIONS: All patients received a 500-µg/h infusion of octreotide acetate preoperatively, intraoperatively, and postoperatively. MEASUREMENTS: Anesthesia and surgical records were reviewed. Carcinoid crisis was defined as a systolic blood pressure of less than 80mm Hg for greater than 10minutes. Patients who experienced intraoperative hypertension or hypotension, profound tachycardia, or a "crisis" according to the operative note were also reviewed. MAIN RESULTS: One hundred sixty-nine (169/179; 94%) patients had normal anesthesia courses. The medical records of 10 patients were further investigated for a potential intraoperative crisis using the aforementioned criteria. Upon review, 6 patients were determined to have had a crisis. The final incidence of intraoperative crisis was 3.4% (6/179). CONCLUSIONS: A continuous high-dose infusion of octreotide acetate intraoperatively minimizes the incidence of carcinoid crisis. We believe that the low cost and excellent safety profile of octreotide warrant the use of this therapy during extensive surgical procedures for midgut and foregut NETs.


Subject(s)
Anesthesia/adverse effects , Carcinoid Tumor/surgery , Intestinal Neoplasms/surgery , Intraoperative Complications/prevention & control , Malignant Carcinoid Syndrome/prevention & control , Octreotide/therapeutic use , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Gastrointestinal Agents/therapeutic use , Humans , Hypotension/prevention & control , Male , Middle Aged , Retrospective Studies , Syndrome , Tachycardia/prevention & control
19.
J Manag Care Spec Pharm ; 22(1): 74-80, 2016 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27015054

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: As the proportion of older adult patients who interface with the health care system grows, clinical pharmacy specialists (CPS) have a pivotal role in reducing potentially inappropriate medication (PIM) use in this population. OBJECTIVES: To (a) describe CPS involvement in the design and implementation of a quality improvement (QI) initiative to decrease PIM prescribing in a Veterans Affairs (VA) emergency department (ED) and (b) report on changes in PIM prescribing before and after the initiative. METHODS: Enhancing Quality of Prescribing Practices for Veterans Discharged from the Emergency Department (EQUiPPED) is an ongoing multisite QI project that aims to decrease ED PIM prescribing. We used a mixed-method approach that applied qualitative and quantitative measures in describing the CPS role and evaluating PIM rates. PIMs were defined using the 2012 Beers Criteria. We reported monthly PIM rates in patients aged 65 years and older who were discharged from the ED from January 2012 to November 2014. A piecewise, nonlinear regression model evaluated the pattern in PIM prescriptions over time. RESULTS: At the Durham, North Carolina, VA Medical Center, a total of 4 CPS were involved with tailoring the design and implementation of the EQUiPPED intervention for local use. CPS input led to 3 key innovations: academic detailing performed by a physician-CPS pair, medication alert messages identifying medications as PIMs in the computerized patient record system, and automated reports describing the frequency and type of PIMs prescribed by each ED provider. Between February 2013 and November 2014, 73 ED providers received the academic detailing. The ED facility experienced a relative reduction of 47.5% in the rate of PIM prescribing over the observation period. CONCLUSIONS: This QI project resulted in a meaningful decrease in PIM prescribing in older ED adults. CPS contributions to QI can extend beyond pharmacotherapy and provider education to also include information technology tools using formulary management expertise.


Subject(s)
Medication Errors/prevention & control , Pharmacy Service, Hospital , Quality Improvement , Aged , Emergency Service, Hospital , Humans , North Carolina , Veterans
20.
J Am Geriatr Soc ; 63(5): 1025-9, 2015 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25945692

ABSTRACT

Suboptimal medication prescribing for older adults has been described in a number of emergency department (ED) studies. Despite this, few studies have examined ED-targeted interventions aimed at reducing the use of potentially inappropriate medications (PIMs). Enhancing Quality of Prescribing Practices for Older Veterans Discharged from the ED (EQUiPPED) is an ongoing multicomponent, interdisciplinary quality improvement initiative in eight Department of Veterans Affairs EDs. The project aims to decrease the use of PIMs, as identified by the Beers criteria, prescribed to veterans aged 65 and older at the time of ED discharge. Interventions include provider education; informatics-based clinical decision support with electronic medical record-embedded geriatric pharmacy order sets and links to online geriatric content; and individual provider education including academic detailing, audit and feedback, and peer benchmarking. Poisson regression was used to compare the number of PIMs that staff providers prescribed to veterans aged 65 and older discharged from the ED before and after the initiation of the EQUiPPED intervention. Initial data from the first implementation site show that the average monthly proportion of PIMs that staff providers prescribed was 9.4±1.5% before the intervention and 4.6±1.0% after the initiation of EQUiPPED (relative risk=0.48, 95% confidence interval=0.40-0.59, P<.001). Preliminary evaluation demonstrated a significant and sustained reduction of ED-prescribed PIMs in older veterans after implementation of EQUiPPED. Longer follow-up and replication at collaborating sites would allow for an assessment of the effect on health outcomes and costs.


Subject(s)
Drug Prescriptions/standards , Quality Improvement , Veterans Health , Aged , Emergency Service, Hospital , Humans , Patient Discharge
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