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EHR Tool Could Help Reduce Unnecessary CT Scans, Study Finds

An accountability tool embedded in an electronic health record system could  help reduce unnecessary CT scans among emergency department patients with  abdominal pain, according to a study presented last week at the annual  meeting of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine, United Press International reports.

Angela Mills — medical director of the Hospital of the University of  Pennsylvania’s ED and co-author of the study — said abdominal pain often  is difficult to diagnose, so ED physicians typically rely on CT scans to  determine the source of the problem. Such practices can expose patients to  unnecessary radiation and increase health care costs, Mills said (United  Press International, 5/12).

About the Tool

In October 2011, the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania installed an  accountability tool in its EHR system that asks physicians a series of questions  when they order an abdominal CT scan. The tool asks physicians about:

  • Suspected primary and secondary diagnoses;
  • Probability that the primary diagnosis will be accurate; and
  • Whether the physician is the primary clinician ordering the scan.

Although the tool does not prevent physicians from ordering abdominal CT  scans, it does require an attending physician to sign off on CT scans ordered by  a medical resident.

Study Details

For the study, researchers compared the number of CT scans ordered at  two Penn EDs between July 2011 and Oct. 16, 2011 — before the accountability  tool was installed — with the number of CT scans ordered between Oct. 17, 2011  and March 2012.

The study population included 11,176 patients older than 18. Eighty-one  percent of those patients presented with a primary complaint of abdominal  pain.

Study Findings

After the implementation of the accountability tool, the percentage of  patients studied who underwent a CT scan decreased from 32.3% to 28%, according  to the study.

After adjusting for certain factors, the researchers calculated a 10% overall  reduction in the number of abdominal CT scans ordered after the tool was  deployed (Fratt, CMIO, 5/14).

Researchers said that requiring physicians to walk through a series of steps  before ordering a CT scan appeared to encourage the care team to rethink their  decision to order the test (United Press International, 5/12).

Source: iHealthBeat

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