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Search Results for medical record
Abstract Number: 292
Hospital Medicine 2016, March 6-9, San Diego, Calif.
Background: Accurate problem lists linked to electronic medical record (EMR) clinical data can be useful for chart review by clinicians for patient care, clinical decision support design, and data extraction for clinical research. The EMR at Stanford Hospital allows the problem list to be modified in several ways: adding and deleting problems, and designating problems […]
Abstract Number: 302
Hospital Medicine 2018; April 8-11; Orlando, Fla.
Background: Deployment of Electronic Medical Records (EMR) consumes significant enterprise-wide resources. Hospitals may be reluctant to introduce further changes during the same year, including patient experience improvement initiatives. Deployment efforts may stretch clinical leaders who provide oversight on patient experience efforts. Lastly, EMR is noted to be a major source of provider burnout and deployment […]
Abstract Number: 314
Hospital Medicine 2018; April 8-11; Orlando, Fla.
Background: Transitions of care are critical to maintaining patient safety and decreasing adverse events, but they remain a complex process with many pitfalls. Electronic Medical Record (EMR) based handoffs can enhance communication by centralizing content for serial handoffs between providers, facilitating real-time updates and automatically incorporating patient data elements. Over the past several years, much […]
Abstract Number: 355
Hospital Medicine 2019, March 24-27, National Harbor, Md.
Background: The EMR does not provide readily available information that conveys an at-a-glance understanding of discharge progress for a given patient. Healthcare workers have different workflows and need to manage the information in different ways, with a reliance on one-to-one conversations. We believe that optimizing patient length of stay is hindered by lack of: data […]
Abstract Number: 388
SHM Converge 2023
Background: While hospitalists pursue a primarily clinical role, we have carved a niche in clinical research, particularly Quality Improvement based research. However, clinical research often involves time intensive chart review, which can become a barrier to hospitalists with heavy clinical roles. A mechanism to mitigate this will be revolutionary. Purpose: In this innovations abstract, we […]
Abstract Number: 402
Hospital Medicine 2020, Virtual Competition
Background: New Mexico has the highest number of alcohol-related deaths in the country, a title held since 1981. Nationally 1 in 10 deaths in working-aged adults are alcohol-associated whereas in New Mexico the ratio is 1 in 6 deaths. About 130,000 New Mexicans report alcohol dependence or abuse within the past year, but only 3% […]
Abstract Number: 420
SHM Converge 2023
Background: Electronic medical records (EMR) often allow automated recurring orders of different components of hospital care, including lab tests, vital signs, and telemetry monitoring. However, as patients clinically stabilize during a hospital admission the frequency and intensity of these recurring orders may be unwarranted (1). Well-designed EMR order sets have shown potential to decrease inappropriate […]
Abstract Number: 423
Hospital Medicine 2019, March 24-27, National Harbor, Md.
Background: Hospital discharge is a vulnerable time: patients are at risk for readmission, adverse events, and death. Activated patients–those with the knowledge, confidence, and skills to engage in activities that promote self-management–are more likely to execute a safe discharge plan and less likely to be readmitted. Educational videos focused on self-management may increase patient activation […]
Abstract Number: 423
SHM Converge 2023
Background: In the inpatient setting, serum potassium (K) and magnesium (Mg) are frequently replaced for patients with values within the reference range (generally K 3.5-5.0 mEq/L, Mg 1.3-2.2 mEq/L) to target an arbitrary goal of 4 mEq/L for K and 2 mEq/L for Mg.(1,2) For certain high-risk non-pregnant adults, K and Mg replacement to these […]
Abstract Number: 440
Hospital Medicine 2020, Virtual Competition
Background: As inpatient medical care has increased in complexity and fragmentation, rounding has become siloed away from patients and by discipline, resulting in disjointed and inefficient care models. In response, hospitalist groups across the country have been implementing unit-based rounding programs to centralize communication and align work-flow of health care team members. At UC San […]