Efficiency of computerized clinical decision support systems involving anticoagulants: A flashmob study in Dutch hospital pharmacies

Author:

Graafsma Jetske1ORCID,van de Garde Ewoudt M. W.23,Derijks Hieronymus J.4,Hoge Rien H. L.56,Klopotowska Joanna E.78ORCID,Karapinar‐Carkit Fatma910,van den Bemt Patricia M. L. A.1,

Affiliation:

1. Department of Clinical Pharmacy and Pharmacology University Medical Center Groningen Groningen the Netherlands

2. Department of Pharmacy St. Antonius Hospital Utrecht/Nieuwegein the Netherlands

3. Division Pharmacoepidemiology and Clinical Pharmacology Utrecht University Utrecht the Netherlands

4. Department of Pharmacy Jeroen Bosch Hospital Den Bosch the Netherlands

5. Department of Pharmacy Wilhelmina Hospital Assen the Netherlands

6. Gaston Medical Eindhoven the Netherlands

7. Department of Medical Informatics Amsterdam UMC University of Amsterdam Amsterdam the Netherlands

8. Amsterdam Public Health Institute Amsterdam the Netherlands

9. Department of Clinical Pharmacy & Toxicology Maastricht University Medical Center+ Maastricht the Netherlands

10. Department of Clinical Pharmacy, CARIM, Cardiovascular Research Institute Maastricht Maastricht University Maastricht the Netherlands

Abstract

AimsComputerized decision support systems (CDSSs) aim to prevent adverse drug events. However, these systems generate an overload of alerts that are not always clinically relevant. Anticoagulants are frequently involved in these alerts. The aim of this study was to investigate the efficiency of CDSS alerts on anticoagulants in Dutch hospital pharmacies.MethodsA multicentre, single‐day, cross‐sectional study was conducted using a flashmob design in Dutch hospital pharmacies, which have CDSSs that operate on both a national medication surveillance database and on self‐developed clinical rules. Hospital pharmacists and pharmacy technicians collected data on the number and type of alerts and time needed for assessing these alerts. The primary outcome was the CDSS efficiency on anticoagulants, defined as the percentage of alerts on anticoagulants that led to an intervention. Secondary outcomes where among other CDSSs efficiency related to any medications and the time expenditure. Descriptive data‐analysis was used.ResultsOf the 69 hospital pharmacies invited, 42 (61%) participated. The efficiency of CDSS alerts on anticoagulants was 4.0% (interquartile range [IQR] 14.0%) for the national medication surveillance database alerts and 14.3% (IQR 40.0%) for alerts from clinical rules. For any medication, the efficiency was lower: 1.8% (IQR 7.5%) and 13.4% (IQR 21.5%) respectively. The median time for assessing the relevance of all alerts was 2 (IQR 1:21) h/day for pharmacists and 6 (IQR 5:01) h/day for pharmacy technicians.ConclusionCDSS efficiency is generally low, both for anticoagulants and any medication, while the time investment is high. Optimization of CDSSs is needed.

Publisher

Wiley

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