Technological resources and personnel costs required to implement an automated alert system for ambulatory physicians when patients are discharged from hospitals to home

With the adoption of electronic medical records by medical group practices, there are opportunities to improve the quality of care for patients discharged from hospitals. However, there is little guidance for medical groups outside integrated hospital systems to automate the flow of patient informat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Informatics in primary care 2012, Vol.20 (2), p.87-93
Hauptverfasser: Field, Terry S, Garber, Lawrence, Gagne, Shawn J, Tjia, Jennifer, Preusse, Peggy, Donovan, Jennifer L, Kanaan, Abir O, Gurwitz, Jerry H
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container_end_page 93
container_issue 2
container_start_page 87
container_title Informatics in primary care
container_volume 20
creator Field, Terry S
Garber, Lawrence
Gagne, Shawn J
Tjia, Jennifer
Preusse, Peggy
Donovan, Jennifer L
Kanaan, Abir O
Gurwitz, Jerry H
description With the adoption of electronic medical records by medical group practices, there are opportunities to improve the quality of care for patients discharged from hospitals. However, there is little guidance for medical groups outside integrated hospital systems to automate the flow of patient information during transitions in care. To describe the technological resources, expertise and time needed to develop an automated system providing information to ambulatory physicians when their patients are discharged from hospitals to home. Within a medical group practice, we developed an automated alert system that provides notification of discharges, reminders of the need for follow-up visits, drugs added during inpatient stays, and recommendations for laboratory monitoring of high-risk drugs. We tracked components of the information system required and the time spent by team members. We used USA national averages of hourly wages to estimate personnel costs. Critical components of the information system are notifications of hospital discharges through an admission, discharge and transfer registration (ADT) interface, linkage to the group's scheduling system, access to information on pharmacy dispensing and lab tests, and an interface engine. Total personnel cost was $76,314. Nearly half (47%) was for 614 hours by physicians who developed content, provided overall project management, and reviewed alerts to ensure that only 'actionable' alerts would be sent. Implementing a system to provide information about hospital discharges requires strong internal informatics expertise, cooperation between facilities and ambulatory providers, development of electronic linkages, and extensive commitment of physician time.
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source MEDLINE; DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals
subjects Ambulatory Care Information Systems - organization & administration
Ambulatory Care Information Systems - trends
Continuity of Patient Care - organization & administration
Continuity of Patient Care - trends
Electronic Health Records - organization & administration
Electronic Health Records - standards
Humans
Information Dissemination - methods
Patient Discharge - standards
Patient Discharge - trends
title Technological resources and personnel costs required to implement an automated alert system for ambulatory physicians when patients are discharged from hospitals to home
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