Reducing Inappropriate Stat Echocardiograms: A Quality Improvement Initiative (RISE-QI)

被引:0
|
作者
Scoma, Christopher [1 ]
Patel, Nidhi [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Univ S Florida, Morsani Coll Med, Adv Cardiovasc Imaging, Tampa, FL 33620 USA
[2] James A Haley Vet Hosp, Tampa, FL USA
[3] Univ S Florida, Morsani Coll Med, Tampa, FL 33620 USA
关键词
APPROPRIATE USE CRITERIA;
D O I
10.1016/j.jcjq.2024.06.001
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Background: A complete transthoracic echocardiogram takes approximately 45 minutes to complete, including time for image acquisition and preliminary reporting by the sonographer. The process can take substantially longer if there are technical difficulties or if contrast must be administered due to suboptimal imaging windows. This can create a considerable echocardiogram backlog at high-volume institutions. At the authors' institution, there was a concern that ordering providers were inappropriately designating studies as stat to get their patients to the front of the bottleneck. On review, the quality improvement team found that 19.9% of all echocardiograms ordered during June 2021 were designated stat, of which 44.0% contained indications that the team determined were rarely appropriate for a stat priority designation. Methods: The team located a flaw in the electronic health record interface that encouraged overuse of the stat designation, so an interface change was designed and implemented to create a hard stop requiring the selection of predetermined indications for any stat order. We also reduced the number of steps required to select the less-urgent ASAP priority to encourage its use over stat priority. Results: Within one month postintervention, there was a statistically significant 36.3% reduction in the order of stat echocardiograms, with a concurrent 173.9% rise in ASAP orders over the same time frame. These numbers remained steady at one-year and two-year follow-up analyses. Conclusion: A quick and simple modification to the echocardiogram order user interface can lead to a considerable reduction in the number of stat orders.
引用
收藏
页码:719 / 723
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] A QUALITY IMPROVEMENT INITIATIVE TO DECREASE THE INAPPROPRIATE USE OF TRANSTHORACIC ECHOCARDIOGRAMS IN HEART FAILURE OUTPATIENTS
    Poon, Stephanie
    Algethami, Abdulaziz
    Ross, Heather
    Bhatia, Rajan
    Levitt, Kevin
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CARDIOLOGY, 2016, 67 (13) : 1642 - 1642
  • [2] Reducing Inappropriate Serum Venous Ammonia Ordering: A Quality Improvement Initiative
    Reiche, William S.
    Schutte, Bryce
    Sidhu, Suhail
    Keirns, Darby
    Masih, Durva
    Burright, Isaac
    Millner, Paul
    DeVrieze, Bradley
    Andukuri, Venkata
    Mukherjee, Sandeep
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY, 2022, 117 (10): : S917 - S918
  • [3] Reducing Inappropriate PPI Usage - A QI Initiative at a Suburban Primary Care Clinic
    Badar, Faraz
    Batool, Mina
    Azeez, Hayder
    Kewalramani, Anjali
    Giacobbe, Robert
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY, 2021, 116 : S638 - S638
  • [4] Inpatient Discontinuation of Allopurinol - A Quality Improvement (QI) Initiative
    Tancer, Stephanie
    Al Dulaijan, Basmah
    Khanna, Puja
    ARTHRITIS & RHEUMATOLOGY, 2024, 76 : 2533 - 2534
  • [5] Reducing Inappropriate Antibiotic Prescribing for Adults With Acute Bronchitis in an Urgent Care Setting A Quality Improvement Initiative
    Link, Tamara L.
    Townsend, Mary L.
    Leung, Eugene
    Kommu, Sekhar
    Vega, Rhonda Y.
    Hendrix, Cristina C.
    ADVANCED EMERGENCY NURSING JOURNAL, 2016, 38 (04) : 327 - 335
  • [6] A quality improvement (QI) initiative improves the management of hyperglycaemia in inpatients with diabetes
    Page, E.
    Hunt, Y.
    Allen, R.
    Mitchell, S.
    Rayman, G.
    DIABETIC MEDICINE, 2019, 36 : 137 - 137
  • [7] A Departmental Quality Improvement (QI) Initiative to Reduce the Incidence of Exposure Keratopathy
    Todd, Michael
    Wahr, Joyce
    Wall, Michael
    Barrett, Andrea
    ANESTHESIA AND ANALGESIA, 2023, 136 : 693 - 694
  • [8] Dissemination of an obstetrical quality improvement (QI) initiative using birth certificates
    Iams, Jay
    Ford, Susan
    White, Beth
    Bouchard, Jo
    Friar, Kelly
    Kassouf, Mark
    Paulson, John
    Besl, John
    Fuller, Sandra
    Lannon, Carole
    Rose, Barbara
    Henderson, Zsakeba
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY, 2013, 208 (01) : S321 - S322
  • [9] EXERCISE TESTING AND PRESCRIPTION: A QUALITY IMPROVEMENT (QI) INITIATIVE APPLIED IN THE HOSPITAL AND CLINIC
    Ricard, P. E.
    Gould, A.
    Donovan, C.
    Sudin, N.
    Frain, L.
    Bailey, I
    Duvert, B.
    Rits, S.
    Healey, F.
    Alvino, L.
    Uluer, A.
    PEDIATRIC PULMONOLOGY, 2012, 47 : 398 - 398
  • [10] Reducing inappropriate hernia ultrasound requests: a quality improvement project
    Hardy, Kate
    Lawden, Emilia
    Brown, Joshua
    Phillips, Alexander
    BJS-BRITISH JOURNAL OF SURGERY, 2025, 112 : 7 - 7