Improving the Documentation of Penicillin Allergy Labels Among Pediatric Inpatients

Author:

Hampton Laura L.1,DeBoy Jason T.2,Gunaratne Aruni3,Stallings Amy P.4,Bell Tara5,Phillips Michael A.3,Kamath Sameer S.6,Sterrett Emily C.7,Nazareth-Pidgeon Kristina M.8

Affiliation:

1. aDivision of Hospital Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Medical College of Georgia at Augusta University, Augusta, Georgia

2. bDepartments of Performance Services

3. cPediatrics

4. dDivisions of Allergy and Immunology

5. eClinical Inpatient Pharmacist

6. fCritical Care Medicine

7. gEmergency Medicine

8. hHospital Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Duke University Health System, Durham, North Carolina

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Penicillin allergy is the most common medication allergy, and the penicillin allergy label is commonly over-applied without adequate reaction history inquiry or documentation. Because penicillin allergy labels are often applied in childhood and carried into adulthood, we sought to increase the completeness of reaction history documentation from 20% to 70% for pediatric hospital medicine patients and from 20% to 50% for all other pediatric inpatients within 12 months. As a secondary outcome, we also aimed to increase the proportion of delabeling unnecessary penicillin labels to 20% for all pediatric inpatients. METHODS To address our aims, our quality improvement initiative included education for pediatric faculty and staff, development and implementation of a clinical pathway for allergy risk stratification, and electronic health record optimizations. Statistical process control charts were used to track the impact of the interventions facilitated by an automated dashboard. RESULTS Within 12 months of interventions, the completeness of allergy labels improved from 20% to 64% among patients admitted to the pediatric hospital medicine service and improved from 20% to 45% for all other pediatric inpatients. The frequency of penicillin allergy delabeling remained unchanged; however, 98 patients were risk stratified and 34 received outpatient allergy referrals for further testing. The number of adverse drug reactions to penicillin, a balancing measure, did not change during the study period. CONCLUSIONS We increased the completeness of penicillin allergy documentation using a standardized workflow facilitated by a multidisciplinary clinical pathway. With ongoing efforts, more penicillin delabeling in low-risk patients is anticipated.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics,General Medicine,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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