scholarly journals PCV95 ELECTRONIC MEDICAL RECORD USE AND WARFARIN DRUG-DRUG INTERACTIONS DURING AMBULATORY VISITS IN THE UNITED STATES, 2003–2006

2009 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. A158
Author(s):  
PD Meek ◽  
AC Renaud-Mutart ◽  
LE Cosler
2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 358-360
Author(s):  
Bilaal S Ahmed ◽  
Michael J Beck ◽  
Gregory Williamson ◽  
Jessica E Ericson ◽  
Parvathi Kumar

Abstract Approximately 20% of the nationally reported tetanus infections in children aged 0 to 14 years that occurred in the United States between 2005 and 2015 were treated at Penn State Children’s Hospital. With an electronic medical record search, we identified 5 cases of pediatric tetanus; 100% of these cases occurred in unimmunized children. Their median length of stay was 10 days, and the costs were significant.


2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (7) ◽  
pp. 949-956 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christina M. Yuan ◽  
Dustin J. Little ◽  
Eric S. Marks ◽  
Maura A. Watson ◽  
Rajeev Raghavan ◽  
...  

Background and objectivesAn unintended consequence of electronic medical record use in the United States is the potential effect on graduate physician training. We assessed educational burdens and benefits of electronic medical record use on United States nephrology fellows by means of a survey.Design, setting, participants, & measurementsWe used an anonymous online opinion survey of all United States nephrology program directors (n=148), their faculty, and fellows. Program directors forwarded survey links to fellows and clinical faculty, indicating to how many they forwarded the link. The three surveys had parallel questions to permit comparisons.ResultsTwenty-two percent of program directors (n=33) forwarded surveys to faculty (n=387) and fellows (n=216; 26% of United States nephrology fellows). Faculty and fellow response rates were 25% and 33%, respectively; 51% of fellows agreed/strongly agreed that the electronic medical record contributed positively to their education. Perceived positive effects included access flexibility and ease of obtaining laboratory/radiology results. Negative effects included copy-forward errors and excessive, irrelevant documentation. Electronic medical record function was reported to be slow, disrupted, or completely lost monthly or more by >40%, and these were significantly less likely to agree that the electronic medical record contributed positively to their education. Electronic medical record completion time demands contributed to fellow reluctance to do procedures (52%), participate in conferences (57%), prolong patient interactions (74%), and do patient-directed reading (55%). Sixty-five percent of fellows reported often/sometimes exceeding work-hours limits due to documentation time demands; 85% of faculty reported often/sometimes observing copy-forward errors. Limitations include potential nonresponse and social desirability bias.ConclusionsRespondents reported that the electronic medical record enhances fellow education with efficient and geographically flexible patient data access, but the time demands of data and order entry reduce engagement in educational activities, contribute to work-hours violations, and diminish direct patient interactions.


Author(s):  
Faisal Shakeel ◽  
Daniel Hertz

Objective To determine the prevalence of clinically relevant drug-drug interactions in an intensive care unit of a tertiary care hospital in the United States and to compare to an intensive care unit at a Pakistani hospital, which lacks electronic medical record-based drug-drug interaction screening. Study setting A retrospective cross-sectional analysis was conducted in the cardiovascular intensive care unit (CVICU) at Michigan Medicine (MM), Ann Arbor, MI, USA between Jan 2018 – Jan 2019. Study Design Analysis of 300 MM patients was conducted to identify drug-drug interactions using Micromedex® and Lexicomp®. Descriptive statistics and multivariate binary logistic regression was used. Independent samples t-test was used to compare prevalence between MM and in a similar cohort of patients in the cardiac intensive care (CCU) at KTH, Pakistan from a previously published study. Data Collection Data was collected for patients who were admitted to the CVICU for at least 24 hours and were prescribed at least 2 drugs from the electronic health record of MM. Principal Findings In the intensive care unit of the US hospital, 58% of patients had at least one drug-drug interaction, while 16% had a clinically relevant drug-drug interaction. Significantly fewer patients had drug-drug interactions at the US hospital than the Pakistani hospital (58% vs. 95%, p < 0.01). Polypharmacy and length of stay increased drug-drug interaction occurrence in the US hospital (p <0.01). Conclusion The prevalence of drug-drug interactions in the intensive care unit at the US hospital was high but lower than the Pakistani hospital, likely due to electronic medical record-based screening. Despite electronic medical record-based screening at the US hospital, 8 clinically relevant drug-drug interaction pairs were undetected.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document