Back to Search
Start Over
Clinical Information System and Process Redesign Improves Emergency Department Efficiency
- Source :
- The Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety. 36:179-AP1
- Publication Year :
- 2010
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2010.
-
Abstract
- Fueled by a decade-long increase in emergency department (ED) visits with a concomitant decrease in hospital bed capacity and the number of hospital EDs, ED crowding has reached crisis proportions. Robust information systems and process redesign are two strategies to improve the safety and quality of emergency care. At the ED at the Mount Sinai Medical Center, an urban, tertiary care academic medical center in New York City, elements of departmental work flow were redesigned to streamline patient throughput before implementation of a fully integrated emergency department information system (EDIS) with patient tracking, computerized charting and order entry, and direct access to patient historical data from the hospital data repository. Pre- and postintervention data were analyzed to examine the impact on (ED) efficiency.The length of stay for all patients (arrival to time patient left ED) decreased by 1.94 hours, from 6.69 (n = 508) pre-intervention to 4.75 (n = 691) postintervention (p.001); doctor-to-disposition time (first doctor-patient contact to disposition decision) decreased by 1.90 hours, from 3.64 (n = 508) to 1.74 (n = 691; p.001); door-to-doctor time (triage to first doctor-patient contact) decreased by 0.54 hours, from 1.22 (n = 508) to 0.68 (n = 691; p.001). X-ray turnaround time (TAT) decreased by 0.18 hours from 0.92 (n = 60) to 0.74 (n = 108; p = .179); computerized tomography (CT) scan TAT decreased by 1.56 hours, from 3.89 (n = 40) to 2.33 (n = 29; p.001), lab TAT decreased by 0.59 hours, from 2.03 (n = 121) to 1.44 (n = 271; p = .006).Increasing the clinical information available at the bedside and improving departmental work flow through EDIS implementation and process redesign led to decreased patient throughput times and improved ED efficiency.
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
Ed crowding
Leadership and Management
business.industry
Hospital bed
Patient Tracking
Emergency department
Length of Stay
medicine.disease
Tertiary care
Workflow
Order entry
Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care
Health care
Emergency medicine
Clinical information
medicine
Humans
New York City
Medical emergency
Emergency Service, Hospital
business
Information Systems
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15537250
- Volume :
- 36
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- The Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....0494ae727a81861ce70eaf28056513a0
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/s1553-7250(10)36030-2