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Abstract Number: 174
Hospital Medicine 2019, March 24-27, National Harbor, Md.
Background: Depending on the criterion applied, the systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) criteria and the Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) criteria initially identify distinct populations that present to the emergency department (ED) with suspected sepsis (Prasad et al., SHM 2018). Our work has shown that 52% of patients meet SIRS criteria first and 48% meet […]
Abstract Number: 213
Hospital Medicine 2020, Virtual Competition
Background: Agency of Healthcare Research and Quality reported an increase in Opioid-related hospitalizations from 2005 to 2014. Previous studies in patients undergoing surgery have shown an increased risk of readmission with opioid dependence. This study was intended to identify the all-cause 7 and 30-day readmission rates of hospitalizations with opioid-related disorders, and potential predictors of […]
Abstract Number: 242
Hospital Medicine 2018; April 8-11; Orlando, Fla.
Background: Telemetry is utilized on high risk cardiac patients for monitoring of arrthymias. Guidelines providing clear monitoring indications have been published by AHA to reduce overuse of this resource, which can lead to increased care costs and false positive alerting. Despite the above evidence, our hospital has a high volume of patients on telemetry causing […]
Abstract Number: 251
SHM Converge 2024
Background: Sepsis is a major cause of mortality in hospitalized patients, and early treatment is critical to survival. However, there is a paucity of research on methods to assist real-time clinical decision-making for sepsis treatment. Utilizing data on patients who had sepsis in the ICU, we propose a novel data-driven framework for recommending treatments by […]
Abstract Number: 282
Hospital Medicine 2019, March 24-27, National Harbor, Md.
Background: Financial incentives motivate hospitals to focus on improving patient experience, quality indicators, and efficiency metrics. Efforts to geographically staff hospitalists have renewed the focus on quality improvement efforts at the inpatient unit level. However, in order to maximize the benefit of geographic staffing, a unit-level leadership structure and quality-improvement support system must be developed. […]
Abstract Number: 285
Hospital Medicine 2018; April 8-11; Orlando, Fla.
Background: Electronic health record (EHR) systems are used by a majority of US hospitals. EHR use has been associated with increased task complexity, clinical data volume and provider documentation demands. Studies of multiple specialties suggest that a significant amount of provider time is spent on indirect patient care activities including turbulent provider workflows and documentation. […]
Abstract Number: 290
SHM Converge 2021
Background: The evolving COVID-19 pandemic has raised direct patient care clinical questions that require rapid answers and flexibility in data generation and analysis. Thorough and reliable patient-level data is not available at the local, state, national, or international levels. Institutional efforts to produce datasets derived from electronic health records (EHR) can take months to years […]
Abstract Number: 297
Hospital Medicine 2018; April 8-11; Orlando, Fla.
Background: Accurate, high-quality data is critical for work in quality improvement, research, and clinical operations. With an electronic health record (EHR), vast amounts of observational data are collected on patients every day. This data can provide actionable knowledge if an institution can successfully extract and analyze it. At our institution, which adopted the Epic EHR […]
Abstract Number: 305
Hospital Medicine 2018; April 8-11; Orlando, Fla.
Background: Healthcare research has traditionally relied upon data collected from clinical trials and data generated from patient registries and insurance claims to drive analyses. As electronic health records (EHR) and computerized physician order entry have proliferated, large quantities of healthcare data is being generated daily through their routine use. A form of “big data,” this […]
Abstract Number: 381
Hospital Medicine 2016, March 6-9, San Diego, Calif.
Background: Sickle cell crisis is a acute medical emergency, which may require management in the ICU. Sickle cell anemias are remarkable in their clinical heterogeneity. Some people remain asymptomatic in their adult life, whereas others suffer repeated crisis; requiring multiple hospitalizations. In this study, we determine the demographic factors associated with a high readmission rate […]