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An informatics-based approach to reducing heart failure all-cause readmissions: the Stanford heart failure dashboard.


ABSTRACT: Background:Reduction of 30-day all-cause readmissions for heart failure (HF) has become an important quality-of-care metric for health care systems. Many hospitals have implemented quality improvement programs designed to reduce 30-day all-cause readmissions for HF. Electronic medical record (EMR)-based measures have been employed to aid in these efforts, but their use has been largely adjunctive to, rather than integrated with, the overall effort. Objectives:We hypothesized that a comprehensive EMR-based approach utilizing an HF dashboard in addition to an established HF readmission reduction program would further reduce 30-day all-cause index hospital readmission rates for HF. Methods:After establishing a quality improvement program to reduce 30-day HF readmission rates, we instituted EMR-based measures designed to improve cohort identification, intervention tracking, and readmission analysis, the latter 2 supported by an electronic HF dashboard. Our primary outcome measure was the 30-day index hospital readmission rate for HF, with secondary measures including the accuracy of identification of patients with HF and the percentage of patients receiving interventions designed to reduce all-cause readmissions for HF. Results:The HF dashboard facilitated improved penetration of our interventions and reduced readmission rates by allowing the clinical team to easily identify cohorts with high readmission rates and/or low intervention rates. We significantly reduced 30-day index hospital all-cause HF readmission rates from 18.2% at baseline to 14% after implementation of our quality improvement program ( P ?=?.045). Implementation of our EMR-based approach further significantly reduced 30-day index hospital readmission rates for HF to 10.1% ( P for trend?=?.0001). Daily time to screen patients decreased from 1 hour to 15?minutes, accuracy of cohort identification improved from 83% to 94.6% ( P ?=?.0001), and the percentage of patients receiving our interventions, such as patient education, also improved significantly from 22% to 100% over time ( P ?

SUBMITTER: Banerjee D 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7651943 | biostudies-literature | 2017 May

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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An informatics-based approach to reducing heart failure all-cause readmissions: the Stanford heart failure dashboard.

Banerjee Dipanjan D   Thompson Christine C   Kell Charlene C   Shetty Rajesh R   Vetteth Yohan Y   Grossman Helene H   DiBiase Aria A   Fowler Michael M  

Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association : JAMIA 20170501 3


<h4>Background</h4>Reduction of 30-day all-cause readmissions for heart failure (HF) has become an important quality-of-care metric for health care systems. Many hospitals have implemented quality improvement programs designed to reduce 30-day all-cause readmissions for HF. Electronic medical record (EMR)-based measures have been employed to aid in these efforts, but their use has been largely adjunctive to, rather than integrated with, the overall effort.<h4>Objectives</h4>We hypothesized that  ...[more]

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