Gary D Owen, Christopher J Terry, Erin B Neal, Scott D Nelson, Mohamed Omar, Mariah J Pettapiece-Phillips, Sunil Kripalani
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction: Risk of stroke is greater in patients with atrial fibrillation. Anticoagulation is effective at decreasing risk, yet 40-50% of eligible patients are not prescribed anticoagulation and seem to have a concerning gap in care quality. This quality improvement initiative implemented a pharmacist-led approach to identify, verify, and close apparent anticoagulation treatment gaps.
Methods: We included adult primary care patients with diagnosis of atrial fibrillation; congestive heart failure, hypertension, age ≥75 years (doubled), diabetes, stroke/transient ischemic attack (doubled), vascular disease, age 65-74 years, and sex (female) (CHA2DS2-VASc) score of at least 2, and no current anticoagulant use. We identified patients using claims and electronic health record data and evaluated explanations through chart review and provider contact. A provider outreach protocol was developed and implemented to address opportunities for anticoagulation.
Results: Of 242 patients with an apparent gap, 84% had a verified treatment gap. However, 86% of verified treatment gaps were explained through pharmacist chart review and outreach to providers, and they did not require further action. Explanations included spontaneous resolution of atrial fibrillation, patient declining treatment, completion of a procedure to correct atrial fibrillation or mitigate stroke risk, and high bleeding risk.
Conclusions: Relying solely on claims- and electronic health record-based algorithms may substantially overestimate gaps in care quality.
期刊介绍:
The Journal for Healthcare Quality (JHQ), a peer-reviewed journal, is an official publication of the National Association for Healthcare Quality. JHQ is a professional forum that continuously advances healthcare quality practice in diverse and changing environments, and is the first choice for creative and scientific solutions in the pursuit of healthcare quality. It has been selected for coverage in Thomson Reuter’s Science Citation Index Expanded, Social Sciences Citation Index®, and Current Contents®.
The Journal publishes scholarly articles that are targeted to leaders of all healthcare settings, leveraging applied research and producing practical, timely and impactful evidence in healthcare system transformation. The journal covers topics such as:
Quality Improvement • Patient Safety • Performance Measurement • Best Practices in Clinical and Operational Processes • Innovation • Leadership • Information Technology • Spreading Improvement • Sustaining Improvement • Cost Reduction • Payment Reform