Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association : JAMIA
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J Am Med Inform Assoc · Apr 2016
An information model for automated assessment of concordance between advance care preferences and care delivered near the end of life.
To develop an information model for automating evaluation of concordance between patient preferences and end-of-life care. ⋯ An information model for automating the assessment of the concordance between patients' advance care planning preferences and the end-of-life care they received was effective in a small population and has the potential to assess population-level preference-concordance on an ongoing basis.
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J Am Med Inform Assoc · Apr 2016
Patient and physician predictors of patient receipt of therapies recommended by a computerized decision support system when initially prescribed broad-spectrum antibiotics: a cohort study.
Antibiotic computerized decision support systems (CDSSs) were developed to guide antibiotic decisions, yet prescriptions of CDSS-recommended antibiotics have remained low. Our aim was to identify predictors of patients' receipt of empiric antibiotic therapies recommended by a CDSS when the prescribing physician had an initial preference for using broad-spectrum antibiotics. ⋯ We observed that ICU admission and renal impairment were negative predictors of patients' receipt of CDSS-recommended antibiotic therapies. Patients admitted to ICU and those with renal impairment might have more complex clinical conditions that require a physician's assessment in addition to antibiotic CDSS.
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J Am Med Inform Assoc · Apr 2016
Identifying opportunities in EHR to improve the quality of antibiotic allergy data.
Antimicrobial resistance is a growing, global public health crisis, due in large part to the overuse and misuse of antibiotics. Understanding medication allergy data and allergy reactions that are documented in electronic health records (EHRs) can help to identify opportunities to improve the quality of documentation of beta-lactam allergies, thus potentially reducing the prescribing of alternative antibiotics. ⋯ Findings suggest that current EHR documentation practices among the health centers reviewed do not provide enough information on allergic reactions to allow providers to discern between true allergies and common, but anticipated, drug side effects. Improved EHR documentation guidance, training that reinforces the use of standardized data and more detailed recording of allergic reactions, combined with initiatives to address patient barriers including health literacy, may help to improve the accuracy of drug allergies in patients' records. These initiatives, combined with antimicrobial stewardship programs, can help to reduce inappropriate prescribing of alternative antibiotics when beta-lactam antibiotics are first-line and can be tolerated.