Source
Department of Pediatrics, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington, United States of America. robert.l.davis@kp.org
Abstract
OBJECTIVES:
Having shown previously that an electronic prescription writer and decision support system improved pediatric prescribing behavior for otitis media in an academic clinic setting, we assessed whether point-of-care delivery of evidence could demonstrate similar effects for a wide range of other common pediatric conditions.
DESIGN:
Cluster randomized controlled trial.
SETTING:
A teaching clinic/clinical practice site and a primary care pediatric clinic serving a rural and semi-urban patient mix.
PARTICIPANTS:
A total of 36 providers at the teaching clinic/practice site and eight providers at the private primary pediatric clinic.
INTERVENTION:
An evidence-based message system that presented real-time evidence to providers based on prescribing practices for acute otitis media, allergic rhinitis, sinusitis, constipation, pharyngitis, croup, urticaria, and bronchiolitis.
OUTCOME MEASURES:
The proportion of prescriptions dispensed in accordance with evidence.
RESULTS:
The proportion of prescriptions dispensed in accordance with evidence improved four percentage points, from 38% at baseline to 42% following the intervention. The control group improved by one percentage point, from 39% at baseline to 40% at trial's conclusion. The adjusted difference between the intervention and control groups was 8% (95% confidence interval 1%, 15%). Intervention effectiveness did not decrease with time.
CONCLUSION:
For common pediatric outpatient conditions, a point-of-care evidence-based prescription writer and decision support system was associated with significant improvements in prescribing practices.