Effects of passive lab notification features on emergency department process times

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Publication Type thesis
School or College School of Medicine
Department Biomedical Informatics
Author Peterson, Gary Lee
Title Effects of passive lab notification features on emergency department process times
Date 2012-05
Description Annually, 46 million patients, or 37% of patients seen in the emergency department (ED), receive laboratory testing in the U.S.; thus, making efficient lab order and result management critical to improving ED throughput, clinical efficacy, and safety. In order to manage labs and other processes, electronic emergency department tracking systems (EDTS) or electronic whiteboards have evolved features that support clinical, operational, and administrative needs. EDTSs have often augmented manual data entry with interfaces and/or integration with other systems such as registration, laboratory, radiology, and clinical information systems (CIS). One such integration evaluated in this study, EDTS/CIS context sharing, was added to automatically pass all necessary user, patient, and application parameters between the two systems in order to open the CIS lab module for a selected patient when the user is notified in the EDTS that laboratory test results for that patient are available for review. Therefore, context sharing eliminated multiple user steps needed to log-on, search, select, and navigate to the lab viewing module in order to view a patient's lab results. This study evaluates the effects of adding EDTS/CIS context sharing to an EDTS with lab notifications on ED process times. These effects were measured utilizing a pre- and post-intervention design for all ED encounters where specific common labs were resulted. A method of analyzing CIS audit logs in combination with EDTS and laboratory information system timestamps was implemented to measure patient management processes for quality improvement. After adding context sharing to lab notification features, the median interval between the availability of lab results and review of those results by the ordering provider decreased from 22.7 min., by 25% or 5.7 min. (p-value < 0.001), to 17.0 min. However, median time from resulting of labs to patient discharge were essentially unchanged, decreasing from 106.6 min. to 105.0 min. (p-value = 0.080). The proportion of lab results reviewed by physicians in the CIS integrated with the EDTS increased from 66% to 86% after the intervention (p-value < 0.001). EDTS/CIS context sharing and passive lab notification features improved the timeliness and completion of lab result review in the CIS and increased system adoption in this setting. However, reductions in the time intervals to review of lab results in the CIS did not result in an operationally or statistically significant improvement in time to discharge after the availability of results.
Type Text
Publisher University of Utah
Subject Information science; Health care management
Subject MESH Medical Informatics; Patient Identification Systems; Emergency Service, Hospital; Clinical Laboratory Information Systems; Reference Standards; Efficiency, Organizational; Electronic Health Records
Dissertation Institution University of Utah
Dissertation Name Master of Science
Language eng
Relation is Version of Digital reproduction of Effects of Passive Lab Notification Features on Emergency Department Process Times. Spencer S. Eccles Health Sciences Library. Print version available at J. Willard Marriott Library Special Collections.
Rights Management Copyright © Gary Lee Peterson 2012
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 886,857 bytes
Source Original in Marriott Library Special Collections. RA4.5 2012.P48
ARK ark:/87278/s6bz9f76
Setname ir_etd
ID 196380
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6bz9f76
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