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Nephrol. Dial. Transplant. · Jan 2018
eMAP:CKD: electronic diagnosis and management assistance to primary care in chronic kidney disease.
- Aspasia Pefanis, Roslin Botlero, Robyn G Langham, and Craig L Nelson.
- Department of Nephrology, Western Health, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
- Nephrol. Dial. Transplant. 2018 Jan 1; 33 (1): 121-128.
BackgroundThe increasing burden of chronic kidney disease (CKD) underpins the importance for improved early detection and management programs in primary care to delay disease progression and reduce mortality rates. eMAP:CKD is a pilot program for primary care aimed at addressing the gap between current and best practice care for CKD.MethodsCustomized software programs were developed to integrate with primary care electronic health records (EHRs), allowing real-time prompting for CKD risk factor identification, testing, diagnosis and management according to Kidney Health Australia's (KHA) best practice recommendations. Primary care practices also received support from a visiting CKD nurse and education modules. Patient data were analyzed at baseline (150 910 patients) and at 15 months (175 917 patients) following the implementation of the program across 21 primary care practices.ResultsThere was improvement in CKD risk factor recognition (29.40 versus 33.84%; P < 0.001) and more complete kidney health tests were performed (3.20 versus 4.30%; P < 0.001). There were more CKD diagnoses entered into the EHR (0.48 versus 1.55%; P < 0.001) and more patients achieved KHA's recommended management targets (P < 0.001).ConclusionThe eMAP:CKD program has shown an improvement in identification of patients at risk of CKD, appropriate testing and management of these patients, as well as increased documentation of CKD diagnosis entered into the EHRs. We have demonstrated efficacy in overcoming the verified gap between current and best practice in primary care. The success of the pilot program has encouraging implications for use across the primary care community as a whole.© The Author 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of ERA-EDTA.
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