Automated detection of physiologic deterioration in hospitalized patients.

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Automated detection of physiologic deterioration in hospitalized patients.

J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2014 Aug 27;

Authors: Evans RS, Kuttler KG, Simpson KJ, Howe S, Crossno PF, Johnson KV, Schreiner MN, Lloyd JF, Tettelbach WH, Keddington RK, Tanner A, Wilde C, Clemmer TP

Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Develop and evaluate an automated case detection and response triggering system to monitor patients every 5 min and identify early signs of physiologic deterioration.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: A 2-year prospective, observational study at a large level 1 trauma center. All patients admitted to a 33-bed medical and oncology floor (A) and a 33-bed non-intensive care unit (ICU) surgical trauma floor (B) were monitored. During the intervention year, pager alerts of early physiologic deterioration were automatically sent to charge nurses along with access to a graphical point-of-care web page to facilitate patient evaluation.
RESULTS: Nurses reported the positive predictive value of alerts was 91-100% depending on erroneous data presence. Unit A patients were significantly older and had significantly more comorbidities than unit B patients. During the intervention year, unit A patients had a significant increase in length of stay, more transfers to ICU (p=0.23), and significantly more medical emergency team (MET) calls (p=0.0008), and significantly fewer died (p=0.044) compared to the pre-intervention year. No significant differences were found on unit B.
CONCLUSIONS: We monitored patients every 5 min and provided automated pages of early physiologic deterioration. This before-after study found a significant increase in MET calls and a significant decrease in mortality only in the unit with older patients with multiple comorbidities, and thus further study is warranted to detect potential confounding. Moreover, nurses reported the graphical alerts provided information needed to quickly evaluate patients, and they felt more confident about their assessment and more comfortable requesting help.

PMID: 25164256 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

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