Early HIV detection and
treatment decreases morbidity and mortality and reduces high-risk behaviors.
Many Emergency Departments (EDs) have HIV screening programs as recommended by
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Recent federal legislation
includes incentives for electronic health record (EHR) adoption. Our objective
was to analyze the impact of conversion to EHR on a mature ED-based HIV
screening program.
A retrospective pre- and post-EHR implementation cohort
study was conducted in a large urban, academic ED. Medical records were
reviewed for HIV screening rates from August 2008 through October 2013. On 1
November 2010, a comprehensive EHR system was implemented throughout the
hospital. Before EHR implementation, labs were requested by providers by paper
orders with HIV-1/2 automatically pre-selected on every form. This universal
ordering protocol was not duplicated in the new EHR; rather it required a
provider to manually enter the order. Using a chi-squared test, we compared HIV
testing in the 6 months before and after EHR implementation; 55,054 patients
presented before, and 50,576 after EHR implementation. Age, sex, race, acuity
of presenting condition, and HIV seropositivity rates were similar pre- and
post-EHR, and there were no major patient or provider changes during this
period.
Average HIV testing rate was 37.7% of all ED patients pre-, and 22.3%
post-EHR, a 41% decline, leading to 167 missed new diagnoses
after EHR. The rate of HIV screening in the ED decreased after EHR
implementation, and could have been improved with more thoughtful inclusion of
existing human processes in its design.
Purchase full article at: http://goo.gl/bj99ST
By: a*, b, c, bc, c, bc, cde & bc
a Department of
Emergency Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA
b Department of
Medicine, Section of Emergency Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston,
TX, USA
c Harris Health
System, Houston, TX, USA
d Department of
Medicine, Sections of Infectious Diseases and Health Services Research, Baylor
College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA
e Center for
Innovations in Quality, Effectiveness and Safety, Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical
Center, Houston, TX, USA
More at: https://twitter.com/hiv
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