When an asthmatic comes into the emergency room with severe symptoms, clinicians jump into action. What treatment they reach for matters and data suggests there may be better ways to improve the young patient’s outcome. Using intermittent doses of an albuterol inhaler appear to be just as effective (and faster and easier for the patient) than using a nebulizer with continuous albuterol.
Real world data matters more than research does, so follow along as we use the Phrase Health platform to inform both intervention (electronic clinical decision support) and analysis of resulting outcomes to improve the patient experience and clinician efficacy and efficiency in cases of kids admitted to the ER with severe asthma. These video clips are from our recent AMIA Annual Symposium presentation. If you'd like to watch the entire presentation, find it here.
Here, we define the cohort of the analysis, in this case emergency room clinicians.
Based on the model of a key driver diagram, here we choose outcome and process measures. This lets us analyze the adoption of our intervention as well as the association with downstream quality measures.
Here we add the actual intervention itself. In this case, an order set that makes it easy for clinicians to opt for the treatment we’re hoping they’ll use.
Here we analyze the results and determine next steps for our quality improvement project.