Brief Summary
This is a multi-site, 4-arm randomized controlled trial to test the effectiveness of patient photographs displayed in electronic health record (EHR) systems to prevent wrong-patient order errors. The study will be conducted at several academic medical centers that utilize two different EHR systems. Because EHR systems have different functionality for displaying patient photographs, two different study designs will be employed. In Allscripts EHR, a 2-arm randomized trial will be conducted in which providers are randomized to view order verification alerts with versus without patient photographs when placing electronic orders. In Epic EHR, a 2x2 factorial trial will be conducted in which providers are randomized to one of four conditions: 1) no photograph; 2) photograph displayed in the banner only; 3) photograph displayed in a verification alert only; or 4) photograph displayed in the banner and verification alert. The main hypothesis of this study is that displaying patient photographs in the EHR will significantly reduce the frequency of wrong-patient order errors, providing health systems with the evidence needed to adopt this safety practice.
Brief Title
Evaluating the Impact of Patient Photographs for Preventing Wrong-Patient Errors
Detailed Description
Although Computerized provider order entry (CPOE) systems are associated with a reduction in medical errors, when orders are placed electronically certain types of errors, including placing orders on the wrong patient, may occur more frequently. The danger of wrong-patient electronic orders was highlighted by one hospital's report of over 5,000 wrong patient orders in 1 year. With the growing use of electronic health records (EHRs), an effective method to minimize wrong-patient orders is needed. One study showed that patient photographs displayed in EHR systems decreased wrong-patient orders from 12 to 3 per year after patient photographs were implemented. While encouraging, this study was limited due to its small sample size, compared outcomes of the intervention participants to outcomes of a comparison group similar in demographics but may have differed in ways that were not measured in the study (quasi-experimental design), and reliance on voluntary reporting of errors by providers, which is known to be unreliable and greatly underestimate the actual error rate. This research proposes to use an automated and reliable measure of wrong-patient errors instead of voluntary reporting will demonstrate that patient photographs can significantly prevent wrong-patient orders.
Categories
Completion Date
Completion Date Type
Actual
Conditions
Medical Errors
Electronic Medical Records
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
* All patients for whom an order was placed in the study period.
* All providers with the authority to place electronic orders and who placed electronic orders during the study period.
Exclusion Criteria:
* None
* All patients for whom an order was placed in the study period.
* All providers with the authority to place electronic orders and who placed electronic orders during the study period.
Exclusion Criteria:
* None
Inclusion Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
* All patients for whom an order was placed in the study period.
* All providers with the authority to place electronic orders and who placed electronic orders during the study period.
* All patients for whom an order was placed in the study period.
* All providers with the authority to place electronic orders and who placed electronic orders during the study period.
Gender
All
Gender Based
false
Keywords
Allscripts
Epic
Electronic Health Record (EHR)
Electronic orders
Healthy Volunteers
No
Last Update Post Date
Last Update Post Date Type
Actual
Last Update Submit Date
NCT Id
NCT03626766
Org Class
Other
Org Full Name
Columbia University
Org Study Id
AAAR0080
Overall Status
Completed
Phases
Not Applicable
Primary Completion Date
Primary Completion Date Type
Actual
Official Title
A Randomized Controlled Trial Evaluating the Effectiveness of Displaying Patient Photographs in an Electronic Health Record to Prevent Wrong-Patient Electronic Orders
Primary Outcomes
Outcome Description
Using the Wrong-Patient (WP) Retract-and-Reorder measure, the outcome was WP order sessions, defined as series of orders placed by 1 clinician for 1 patient that included ≥1 WP order. The Wrong-Patient Retract-and-Reorder (RAR) measure is an automated, validated, and reliable measure endorsed by the National Quality Forum (NQF #2723). The RAR measure identifies orders placed for a patient that are retracted within 10 minutes, and then placed by the same provider for a different patient within the next 10 minutes. These are near-miss errors, self-caught by the provider before they reach the patient and cause harm.
Outcome Measure
Number of Order Sessions With at Least One Retract-and-Reorder (RAR) Event as Identified by the Wrong-Patient Retract-and-Reorder (RAR) Measure.
Outcome Time Frame
2 years
Secondary Ids
Secondary Id
R01HS024713
Secondary Id
R01HD094793
Start Date
Start Date Type
Actual
Status Verified Date
First Post Date
First Post Date Type
Actual
First Submit Date
First Submit QC Date
Std Ages
Child
Adult
Older Adult
Maximum Age Number (converted to Years and rounded down)
999
Minimum Age Number (converted to Years and rounded down)
0
Investigators
Investigator Type
Principal Investigator
Investigator Name
William Southern
Investigator Email
wsouther@montefiore.org
Investigator Phone
wsouther