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First published May 19, 2005 as JAMIA PrePrint; doi:10.1197/jamia.M1811
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J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2005;12:546-553. DOI 10.1197/jamia.M1811.
© 2005 American Medical Informatics Association


Research Paper

Interventions to Regulate Ordering of Serum Magnesium Levels: Report of an Unintended Consequence of Decision Support

S. Trent Rosenbloom, MD, MPH, Kou-Wei Chiu, MD, Daniel W. Byrne, MS, Doug A. Talbert, PhD, Eric G. Neilson, MD and Randolph A. Miller, MD

Affiliations of the authors: Departments of Biomedical Informatics (STR, RAM), Biostatistics (DWB), and Internal Medicine (DWB, EGN), School of Nursing (STR), Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN; Department of Family Medicine, Riverside Regional Medical Center, Newport News, VA (K-WC); Department of Computer Science, Tennessee Technological University, Cookeville, TN (DAT).

Correspondence and reprints: S. Trent Rosenbloom, MD, MPH, Eskind Biomedical Library, Room 440, 2209 Garland Avenue, Nashville, TN 37232-8340; e-mail: <trent.rosenbloom{at}vanderbilt.edu>.

Received for publication: 02/11/05; accepted for publication: 04/27/05.

Background: Unintended consequences of computerized patient care system interventions may increase resource use, foster clinical errors, and reduce users' confidence.

Objective: To evaluate three successive interventions designed to reduce serum magnesium test ordering through a care provider order entry system (CPOE). The second, modeled after a previously successful intervention, caused paradoxical increases in magnesium test ordering rates.

Design: A time-series analysis modeled weekly rates of magnesium test ordering, underlying trends, the impact of the three successive interventions, and the impact of potential covariates. The first intervention exhorted users to discontinue unnecessary tests recurring more than 72 hours into the future. The second displayed recent magnesium, calcium, and phosphorus test results, limited testing to one test instance per order, and provided education regarding appropriate indications for testing. The third targeted only magnesium ordering, displayed recent results, limited testing to one instance per order, summarized indications for testing, and required users to select an indication.

Participants: Clinicians at Vanderbilt University Hospital, a 609-bed academic inpatient tertiary care facility, from 1998 through 2003.

Measurements: Weekly rates of new serum magnesium test orders, instances, and results.

Results: At baseline, there were 539 magnesium tests ordered per week. This decreased to 380 (p = 0.001) per week after the first intervention, increased to 491 per week (p < 0.001) after the second, and decreased to 276 per week (p < 0.001) after the third.

Conclusion: A clinical decision support intervention intended to regulate testing increased test order rates as an unintended result of decision support. CPOE implementers must carefully design resource-related interventions and monitor their impact over time.




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