Effect of Best Practice Alert

Purpose: The aim of this study was to describe the effectiveness of an electronic health record best practice alert (BPA) in decreasing gynecologic post-discharge opioid prescribing following benign minimally invasive hysterectomy. Patients and Methods: The BPA triggered for opioid orders >15 tab...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of pain research 2024-02, Vol.17, p.667
Hauptverfasser: As-Sanie, Sawsan, Srinivasan, Sudharsan, Choe, Hae Mi, Zimmerman, Christopher, Jankulov, Alexandra, Virzi, Jessica, Brummett, Chad M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Purpose: The aim of this study was to describe the effectiveness of an electronic health record best practice alert (BPA) in decreasing gynecologic post-discharge opioid prescribing following benign minimally invasive hysterectomy. Patients and Methods: The BPA triggered for opioid orders >15 tablets. Prescribers' options included (1) decrease to 15 [less than or equal to] tablets; (2) remove the order/utilize a defaulted order set; or (3) override the alert. Results: 332 patients were included. The BPA triggered 29 times. The following actions were taken among 16 patients for whom the BPA triggered: "override the alert" (n=13); "cancel the alert" (n=2); and 'remove the opioid order set' (n=1). 12/16 patients had discharge prescriptions: one patient received 20 tablets; two received 10 tablets; and nine received 15 tablets. Top reasons for over prescribing included concerns for pain control and lack of alternatives. Conclusion: Implementing a post-discharge opioid prescribing BPA aligned opioid prescribing following benign minimally invasive hysterectomy with guideline recommendations. Keywords: hysterectomy, opioid, prescribing, patient discharge, practice patterns
ISSN:1178-7090
1178-7090