Impact of an electronic medical record-based appointment order on outpatient cardiology follow-up after hospital discharge

被引:0
|
作者
Kartik S. Telukuntla
Chetan P. Huded
Mingyuan Shao
Tim Sobol
Mouin Abdallah
Kathleen Kravitz
Michael Hulseman
Benico Barzilai
Randall C. Starling
Lars G. Svensson
Steven E. Nissen
Umesh N. Khot
机构
[1] Heart,
[2] Vascular and Thoracic Institute Center for Healthcare Delivery Innovation,undefined
[3] Cleveland Clinic,undefined
[4] Heart,undefined
[5] Vascular and Thoracic Institute,undefined
[6] Cleveland Clinic,undefined
[7] Saint Luke’s Mid America Heart Institute,undefined
[8] C5Research,undefined
[9] Department of Cardiovascular Medicine,undefined
[10] Cleveland Clinic,undefined
[11] Heart and Vascular Institute,undefined
[12] MedStar Washington Hospital Center,undefined
[13] Strata Decision Technology,undefined
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Outpatient follow-up after hospital discharge improves continuity of care and reduces readmissions, but rates of follow-up remain low. It is not known whether electronic medical record (EMR)-based tools improve follow-up. The aim of this study was to determine if an EMR-based order to secure cardiology follow-up appointments at hospital discharge would improve follow-up rates and hospital readmission rates. A pre-post interventional study was conducted and evaluated 39,209 cardiovascular medicine discharges within an academic center between 2012 and 2017. Follow-up rates and readmission rates were compared during 2 years prior to EMR-order implementation (pre-order era 2012–2013, n = 12,852) and 4 years after implementation (EMR-order era 2014–2017, n = 26,357). The primary endpoint was 90-day cardiovascular follow-up rates within our health system. In the overall cohort, the mean age of patients was 69.3 years [SD 14.7] and 60.7% (n = 23,827) were male. In the pre-order era, 90-day follow-up was 56.7 ± 0.4% (7286 of 12,852) and increased to 67.9 ± 0.3% (17,888 of 26,357, P < 0.001) in the EMR-order era. The use of the EMR follow-up order was independently associated with increased outpatient follow-up within 90 days after adjusting for patient demographics and payor status (OR 3.28, 95% CI 3.10–3.47, P < 0.001). The 30-day readmission rate in the pre-order era was 12.8% (1642 of 12,852) compared with 13.7% (3601 of 26,357, P = 0.016) in the EMR-order era. An EMR-based appointment order for follow-up appointment scheduling was associated with increased cardiovascular medicine follow-up, but was not associated with an observed reduction in 30-day readmission rates.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Development and Evaluation of an Electronic Health Record-Based Best-Practice Discharge Checklist for Hospital Patients
    Garg, Trit
    Lee, Jonathan Y.
    Evans, Kambria H.
    Chen, Jonathan
    Shieh, Lisa
    JOINT COMMISSION JOURNAL ON QUALITY AND PATIENT SAFETY, 2015, 41 (03): : 126 - +
  • [42] PSYCHOSOCIAL ADJUSTMENT OF MEDICAL INPATIENTS AFTER DISCHARGE - A FOLLOW-UP STUDY
    PAYSON, HE
    DAVIS, JM
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, 1967, 123 (10): : 1220 - &
  • [43] Adequacy of Hospital Discharge Summaries in Documenting Tests with Pending Results and Outpatient Follow-up Providers
    Were, Martin C.
    Li, Xiaochun
    Kesterson, Joe
    Cadwallader, Jason
    Asirwa, Chite
    Khan, Babar
    Rosenman, Marc B.
    JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2009, 24 (09) : 1002 - 1006
  • [44] Adequacy of Hospital Discharge Summaries in Documenting Tests with Pending Results and Outpatient Follow-up Providers
    Martin C. Were
    Xiaochun Li
    Joe Kesterson
    Jason Cadwallader
    Chite Asirwa
    Babar Khan
    Marc B. Rosenman
    Journal of General Internal Medicine, 2009, 24 : 1002 - 1006
  • [45] Improved Follow-Up After Hospital Discharge Does Not Impact 30-Day Readmissions After Vascular Procedures
    Pozolo, Cara G.
    Philip, Christina
    Holmes, Austin J.
    Mell, Matthew
    JOURNAL OF VASCULAR SURGERY, 2022, 75 (06) : E132 - E132
  • [46] Telephone follow-up after discharge from the hospital: Does it make a difference?
    Bostrom, J
    Caldwell, J
    McGuire, K
    Everson, D
    APPLIED NURSING RESEARCH, 1996, 9 (02) : 47 - 52
  • [47] The follow-up of children on home invasive mechanical ventilation after hospital discharge
    Buyuksahin, Halime Nayir
    Yalcin, Ebru
    PEDIATRIC PULMONOLOGY, 2024, 59 (08) : 2145 - 2148
  • [48] THE IMPACT OF SOCIAL DETERMINANTS OF HEALTH ON LAPSES IN OUTPATIENT PEDIATRIC CARDIOLOGY FOLLOW-UP 1490-189
    Boyer, Katherine
    Marcuccio, Elisa
    Carney, Sarah de Loizaga
    Saeed, Myra
    Statile, Christopher
    Tippmann, Tara L.
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CARDIOLOGY, 2024, 83 (13) : 1648 - 1648
  • [49] STANDARDIZING THE DISCHARGE PROCESS WITH AN ELECTRONIC MEDICAL RECORD-BASED CHECKLIST - A RESIDENT-LED QUALITY IMPROVEMENT INITIATIVE
    Venkatesan, Chapy
    Maaty, Nancy
    Lui, Kimberly
    Kalwaney, Shirley
    Mishra, Alita
    Price, Lillian K.
    Fang, Yun
    JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2014, 29 : S496 - S496
  • [50] Psychological impact of COVID-19 after hospital discharge: A follow-up study on Italian recovered patients
    Spada, Maria Simonetta
    Biffi, Ave Maria
    Belotti, Luca
    Cremaschi, Laura
    Palumbo, Claudia
    Locatelli, Clara
    Cesana, Bruno Mario
    Bondi, Emi
    JOURNAL OF AFFECTIVE DISORDERS, 2022, 317 : 84 - 90