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Forbes Healthcare Summit
2017-11-29 - 2017-11-30    
All Day
ForbesLive leverages unique access to the world’s most influential leaders, policy-makers, entrepreneurs, and artists—uniting these global forces to harness their collective knowledge, address today’s critical [...]
29th Annual National Forum on Quality Improvement in Health Care
2017-12-10 - 2017-12-13    
All Day
PROGRAM OVERVIEW The IHI National Forum on December 10–13​, 2017, will bring more than 5,000 brilliant minds in health care to Orla​​ndo, Florida, to find meaningful connections [...]
Dallas Health IT Summit
2017-12-14 - 2017-12-15    
All Day
About Health IT Summits U.S. healthcare is at an inflection point right now, as policy mandates and internal healthcare system reform begin to take hold, [...]
Events on 2017-11-29
Forbes Healthcare Summit
29 Nov 17
New York
Events on 2017-12-14
Dallas Health IT Summit
14 Dec 17
Dallas
Latest News

Study Finds Many EHR Alerts for Opioids Are Clinically Insignificant

Study Finds Many EHR Alerts for Opioids Are Clinically Insignificant

A hospital emergency department’s electronic health record issued many unnecessary and clinically insignificant alerts for opioids, contributing to alert fatigue among providers, according to a studypublished in the Annals of Emergency Medicine, FierceEMR reports (Durben Hirsch, FierceEMR, 11/10).

Study Details

For the study, researchers at the University of Colorado School of Medicine examined clinical decision support tools included in a commercial EHR at the ED of an unspecified urban academic medical center (Genco et al, Annals of Emergency Medicine, 11/6). The researchers reviewed 4,581 patient records and 4,692 opioid-related alerts intended to avert 38 adverse drug events.

Study Findings

The researchers found that to prevent one adverse drug event providers received about 123 unnecessary alerts.

According to the study:

  • 98.9% of opioid-related alerts failed to result in or avoid an actual adverse drug event; and
  • 96.3% of opioid-related alerts were overridden by providers.

In addition, the study found the EHR’s CDS tools failed to avert 14 adverse drug events that did occur, including eight that were related to opioids.

The researchers recommended that EHR vendors redesign alerts using a more tiered approach that would make less clinically significant less intrusive and the most specific and critical alerts difficult to override.

The study’s lead author Emma Genco in a statement said, “We need to improve the ‘signal to noise’ ratio of these alerts, especially in the chaotic environment of the [ED],” adding, “Interruptions are already a significant fact of life in [EDs], which is why we need to eliminate the meaningless ones”