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Impact of an electronic health record alert in primary care on increasing hepatitis c screening and curative treatment for baby boomers
Author(s) -
Konerman Monica A.,
Thomson Mary,
Gray Kristen,
Moore Meghan,
Choxi Hetal,
Seif Elizabeth,
Lok Anna S.F.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
hepatology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.488
H-Index - 361
eISSN - 1527-3350
pISSN - 0270-9139
DOI - 10.1002/hep.29362
Subject(s) - medicine , baby boomers , specialty , hepatitis c , hepatitis c virus , primary care , electronic health record , health care , medical record , pediatrics , family medicine , immunology , virus , economics , demographic economics , economic growth
Despite effective treatment for chronic hepatitis C, deficiencies in diagnosis and access to care preclude disease elimination. Screening of baby boomers remains low. The aims of this study were to assess the impact of an electronic health record–based prompt on hepatitis C virus (HCV) screening rates in baby boomers in primary care and access to specialty care and treatment among those newly diagnosed. We implemented an electronic health record–based “best practice advisory” (BPA) that prompted primary care providers to perform HCV screening for patients seen in primary care clinic (1) born between 1945 and 1965, (2) who lacked a prior diagnosis of HCV infection, and (3) who lacked prior documented anti‐HCV testing. The BPA had associated educational materials, order set, and streamlined access to specialty care for newly diagnosed patients. Pre‐BPA and post‐BPA screening rates were compared, and care of newly diagnosed patients was analyzed. In the 3 years prior to BPA implementation, 52,660 baby boomers were seen in primary care clinics and 28% were screened. HCV screening increased from 7.6% for patients with a primary care provider visit in the 6 months prior to BPA to 72% over the 1 year post‐BPA. Of 53 newly diagnosed patients, all were referred for specialty care, 11 had advanced fibrosis or cirrhosis, 20 started treatment, and 9 achieved sustained virologic response thus far. Conclusion : Implementation of an electronic health record–based prompt increased HCV screening rates among baby boomers in primary care by 5‐fold due to efficiency in determining needs for HCV screening and workflow design. Streamlined access to specialty care enabled patients with previously undiagnosed advanced disease to be cured. This intervention can be easily integrated into electronic health record systems to increase HCV diagnosis and linkage to care. (H epatology 2017;66:1805–1813)

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