Impact of patient-centered decision support on quality of asthma care in the emergency department

被引:29
|
作者
Porter, SC
Forbes, P
Feldman, HA
Goldmann, DA
机构
[1] Childrens Hosp, Div Emergency Med, Dept Med, Boston, MA 02115 USA
[2] Childrens Hosp, Clin Res Program, Boston, MA 02115 USA
关键词
clinical decision-support systems; patient; centered care; emergency medicine; asthma; quality of health care;
D O I
10.1542/peds.2005-0906
中图分类号
R72 [儿科学];
学科分类号
100202 ;
摘要
OBJECTIVE. Communication barriers between parents of children with asthma and clinical emergency department (ED) providers and subsequent underrecognition of chronicity and severity impede improvements in disease management for patients with asthma in the ED setting. The asthma kiosk, a novel patient-driven decision-support tool, provides ED clinicians with tailored recommendations for guideline-based treatment. We evaluated the impact of the asthma kiosk on measures of quality during ED care, specifically, parent-reported satisfaction with dimensions of care related to communication and providers' adoption of guideline-endorsed processes of care. METHODS. A clinical trial composed of a baseline and an intervention period was conducted at a single tertiary care pediatric ED. Eligible participants were English-or Spanish-speaking parents of children who were 1 to 12 years of age and had a respiratory complaint and history of asthma. Parents used the kiosk to report children's symptoms, current medications, and unmet needs. During a 2-month baseline, no output from the kiosk was shared, and usual care proceeded. During a 3-month intervention that followed a 1-week run-in period, the output was shared with ED clinicians. All parents completed a telephone follow-up interview 1 week after discharge. Primary outcomes were (1) prescription of controller medication to patients who had persistent asthma symptoms and were not on controllers and (2) mean problem scores for 2 specific dimensions of care: information-sharing and partnership. RESULTS. Over 5 months, 1090 parent-child dyads were screened and 430 were eligible. A total of 286 (66.5%) of 430 parents enrolled in the trial. The kiosk generated severity classifications for 264 (92.3%) of 286 children. A total of 131 parents enrolled during baseline, 13 during a 1-week test phase, and 142 during intervention. Baseline participants were older (mean age: 5.3 years) compared with intervention (4.4 years) but did not differ on chronic severity, current use of controllers, or race. The total number of prescribed inhaled corticosteroids did not vary significantly between intervention and baseline (9 of 50 vs 4 of 43). Providers did prescribe inhaled fluticasone to eligible patients more often during intervention than baseline (9 of 50 vs 2 of 43). The number of reported information problems was unchanged between the baseline and intervention periods. The mean number of partnership problems increased from a mean of 1.5 (SD: 1.9) at baseline to a mean of 1.9 (SD: 1.4) during the intervention. This difference was marginally significant after adjustment for child gender, age, and severity category. When ED providers acted on kiosk data, reports of information problems were fewer (0.6 +/- 0.8) than when no action was taken (1.1 +/- 1.1). CONCLUSIONS. The asthma kiosk demonstrated small and variable impact on quality. Physicians' nonuse of kioskgenerated recommendations may explain the limited impact of the intervention.
引用
收藏
页码:E33 / E42
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The asthma kiosk: A patient-centered technology for collaborative decision support in the emergency department
    Porter, SC
    Cai, ZH
    Gzibbons, W
    Goldmann, DA
    Kohane, IS
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL INFORMATICS ASSOCIATION, 2004, 11 (06) : 458 - 467
  • [2] Development of a Patient-centered Outcome Measure for Emergency Department Asthma Patients
    Samuels-Kalow, Margaret E.
    Rhodes, Karin V.
    Henien, Mira
    Hardy, Emily
    Moore, Thomas
    Wong, Felicia
    Camargo, Carlos A., Jr.
    Rizzo, Caroline T.
    Mollen, Cynthia
    ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2017, 24 (05) : 511 - 522
  • [3] Patient-centered care for chronic pain in the emergency department: A qualitative study
    Jambunathan, Jayalakshmi
    Chappy, Sharon
    Siebers, Jack
    Deda, Alishia
    INTERNATIONAL EMERGENCY NURSING, 2016, 24 : 22 - 27
  • [4] Recommendations for patient-centered emergency care
    Litwin, Sasha
    Vaillancourt, Samuel
    Labelle, Frederique Kyomi
    Mondoux, Shawn
    Berthelot, Simon
    Clarke, Lindsay
    Hofstetter, Cathie
    Vandenberg, Stephanie
    Lang, Eddy
    Chartier, Lucas B.
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2024, 26 (08) : 513 - 519
  • [5] Tablet-Based Patient-Centered Decision Support for Minor Head Injury in the Emergency Department: Pilot Study
    Singh, Navdeep
    Hess, Erik
    Guo, George
    Sharp, Adam
    Huang, Brian
    Breslin, Maggie
    Melnick, Edward
    JMIR MHEALTH AND UHEALTH, 2017, 5 (09):
  • [6] Interventions to Improve Patient-centered Care During Times of Emergency Department Crowding
    Julius Cuong Pham
    Trueger, N. Seth
    Hilton, Joshua
    Khare, Rahul K.
    Smith, Jeffrey P.
    Bernstein, Steven L.
    ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2011, 18 (12) : 1289 - 1294
  • [7] Patient-Centered Values and Experiences with Emergency Department and Mental Health Crisis Care
    Thomas, Kathleen C.
    Owino, Hillary
    Ansari, Sana
    Adams, Leslie
    Cyr, Julianne M.
    Gaynes, Bradley N.
    Glickman, Seth W.
    ADMINISTRATION AND POLICY IN MENTAL HEALTH AND MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH, 2018, 45 (04) : 611 - 622
  • [8] Patient-Centered Values and Experiences with Emergency Department and Mental Health Crisis Care
    Kathleen C. Thomas
    Hillary Owino
    Sana Ansari
    Leslie Adams
    Julianne M. Cyr
    Bradley N. Gaynes
    Seth W. Glickman
    Administration and Policy in Mental Health and Mental Health Services Research, 2018, 45 : 611 - 622
  • [9] Patient-Centered Oncology Care: Impact on Utilization, Patient Experiences, and Quality
    Roth, Lindsey M.
    Tirodkar, Manasi
    Patel, Tejal
    Friedberg, Mark
    Smith-McLallen, Aaron
    Scholle, Sarah Hudson
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MANAGED CARE, 2020, 26 (09): : 372 - +
  • [10] A patient-centered approach to frequent emergency department attenders
    Phillips, Georgina
    ANNALS OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2007, 49 (03) : 379 - 379