Improving Pediatric Intensive Care Unit Discharge Timeliness of Infants with Bronchiolitis Using Clinical Decision Support

Appl Clin Inform. 2023 Mar;14(2):392-399. doi: 10.1055/a-2036-0337. Epub 2023 Feb 15.

Abstract

Background: Identifying children ready for transfer out of the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) is an area that may benefit from clinical decision support (CDS). We previously implemented a quality improvement (QI) initiative to accelerate the transfer evaluation of non-medically complex PICU patients with viral bronchiolitis receiving floor-appropriate respiratory support.

Objectives: Design a CDS tool adaptation of this QI initiative to further accelerate transfer evaluation of appropriate patients.

Methods: The original initiative focused on identifying for transfer evaluation otherwise healthy children admitted to the PICU with bronchiolitis who had been receiving floor-appropriate levels of respiratory support for at least 6 hours. However, this initiative required that clinicians manually track the respiratory support of qualifying patients. We designed an electronic health record (EHR)-based CDS tool to automate identification of transfer-ready candidates. The tool parses EHR data to identify children meeting prior QI initiative criteria and alerts clinicians to assess transfer readiness once a child has been receiving floor-appropriate respiratory support for 6 hours. We compared time from reaching floor-appropriate support to placement of the transfer order ("time-to-transfer"), PICU length of stay (LOS), and hospital LOS between patients admitted prior to our QI initiative (December 1, 2018-October 19, 2019, "pre-QI phase"), during the initiative but before CDS tool implementation (October 20, 2019-February 7, 2022, "QI phase"), and after CDS implementation (February 8-November 11, 2022, "CDS phase").

Results: CDS-phase patients (n = 131) had a shorter median time-to-transfer of 5.23 (interquartile range [IQR], 3.38-10.0) hours compared with QI-phase patients (n = 304) at 5.93 (IQR, 4.23-12.2) hours (p = 0.04). PICU and hospital LOS values decreased from the pre-QI (n = 150) to QI phase. Though LOS reductions were sustained during the CDS phase, further reductions from QI to CDS phase were not statistically significant.

Conclusion: An EHR-based CDS adaptation of a prior QI initiative facilitated timely identification of PICU patients with bronchiolitis ready for transfer evaluation. Such tools might allow PICU clinicians to focus on other high-acuity tasks while accelerating transfer evaluation of appropriate patients.

MeSH terms

  • Bronchiolitis* / diagnosis
  • Bronchiolitis* / therapy
  • Child
  • Decision Support Systems, Clinical*
  • Hospitalization
  • Humans
  • Infant
  • Intensive Care Units, Pediatric*
  • Length of Stay
  • Patient Discharge*
  • Retrospective Studies

Grants and funding

Funding None.