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Evaluation of a computer‐based intervention to enhance metabolic monitoring in psychiatry inpatients treated with second‐generation antipsychotics
Author(s) -
DelMonte M. T.,
Bostwick J. R.,
Bess J. D.,
Dalack G. W.
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
journal of clinical pharmacy and therapeutics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.622
H-Index - 73
eISSN - 1365-2710
pISSN - 0269-4727
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2710.2012.01369.x
Subject(s) - psychiatry , medicine , intervention (counseling) , antipsychotic , schizophrenia (object oriented programming)
Summary What is known and Objective: Second‐generation antipsychotics (SGAs) play an important role in the pharmacologic management of various psychiatric conditions. Use of these medications has been associated with metabolic complications. Adherence to guideline‐recommended monitoring is suboptimal. We evaluated the effect of a computerized physician order entry (CPOE) pop‐up alert designed to improve rates of laboratory metabolic monitoring of patients treated with SGAs on a University Hospital inpatient psychiatry unit. Methods: A single‐centre, retrospective chart review was performed in which patient demographics and SGA drug and laboratory data were extracted from the CPOE database. We assessed the number of orders for appropriate metabolic monitoring data for patients admitted within a 6‐month period before or after the alert implementation. Results and Discussion: Pre‐alert ( n = 171) and post‐alert ( n = 157) groups were similar with respect to age, length of stay, sex, race and comorbidities. Following alert implementation, significant increases in monitoring both random (92·4% vs. 100%) and fasting (46·8% vs. 70%) glucose levels as well as random (28·7% vs. 74·5%) and fasting (18·7% vs. 59·9%) lipid panels (all P ≤ 0·001) were observed. The number of patients with both a fasting glucose level and fasting lipid panel available for monitoring increased from 12·9% to 47·8% ( P < 0·0001). Significantly more post‐alert laboratory orders were submitted at the same time as the SGA drug order ( P < 0·0001), suggesting that the alert itself had a direct influence on the ordering of metabolic monitoring labs. What is new and Conclusions: Implementation and use of an electronic pop‐up alert in an inpatient psychiatric unit significantly improved rates of ordering fasting blood glucose and lipid levels for inpatients treated with SGAs. Overall rates remain suboptimal, suggesting a need for additional strategies to further improve metabolic monitoring.