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Clinicians
Contribute Reports
All reports
in this issue have been voluntarily submitted by physicians,
nurse anesthetists, physician assistants and nurse practitioners
from VA facilities across the country.
Alert
Advice
Act One
A PSRS
reporter feels that current VA technology could send clinicians
additional alerts about abnormal results. The clinician evaluated
a patient for stomach problems at the end of a busy clinic
day. Noting that the patient had a rapid heart rate, the clinician
ordered an EKG.
- The
next day... I thought to check the EKG, [but forgot due
to] the amount of work and increasing acuity of patients.
The overlooked
EKG was abnormal.
- Subsequently
the patient was seen in the emergency department and admitted
to the hospital with an abnormal heart rhythm and congestive
heart failure.
The reporter
had a suggestion:
- [Abnormal]
EKG reports could be forwarded to providers as a view alert
or part of email similar to the way critical lab results
are reported.
Alert
Advice
Act Two
A PSRS
reporter believes thresholds for critical values used by the
laboratory to alert clinicians should be reevaluated:
- I
had a patient who was suffering from hematemesis and melena
for several days... [When the patient] came to the VA for
blood tests, hemoglobin was 7, and hematocrit was 22.
The reporter
was concerned that these abnormal values did not prompt an
alert to the clinician. Fortunately, the patient returned
for follow-up three days later.
- The
blood test results were evaluated and the patient was admitted
for anemia and given a blood transfusion.
The reporter
suggested that tighter thresholds could be set, alerting the
clinician when:
- Patient
has a hemoglobin less than 8 and hematocrit less than 24
or a marked change from a previous value, for example, a
20% or 25% decrease. [This would identify] a life threatening
blood test abnormality that cannot wait until the [next]
appointment.
Alert
Advice. Act Three
Two PSRS
reporters found that adverse effects result when clinicians
override caution alert screens when ordering medication. In
the first instance:
- Patient
[who] went to ER for hematoma to lower leg as a result of
injury at home, was a Coumadin patient. Patient was given
20 pills of naproxen (NSAID) 500 mg. bid prn. The prescriber
of the naproxen overrode a significant drug-drug interaction:
naproxen and warfarin, and it was dispensed by pharmacy.
When the
patient came in for an urgent clinic visit to treat a worsening
hematoma, lab tests were taken:
- INR
was 9.2. Patient was subsequently admitted to hospital for
over-anticoagulation. The patient was given Vitamin K after
admission (antidote). It took several days of hospitalization
to regulate the anticoagulant therapy.
In the
second instance, the PSRS reporter found that a clinician
ordered Megace for an emaciated patient.
- Drug
was listed in patient's allergies. Physician received an
alert about the allergy, but entered an override. Medication
was issued by pharmacy, but intercepted by nursing.
The reporter
felt that the situation identified several issues:
- Large
number of alerts already in CPRS (as many as 50-60).
- Alerts
are not prioritized as to severity. For example, a drug
allergy like a minor skin rash has the same significance
as an anaphylactic reaction.
- Alerts
are too easily overridden, without any requirement for justification.
Stony
Silence
A recent
report concerned "patients slipping through the cracks" due
to lack of communication between providers:
- Not
reading the referring provider's notes . puts patients at
risk, and in the long run is more time consuming.
The PSRS
reporter cited a recent example after receiving a patient's
KUB x-ray results:
- The
x-ray report from the radiologist [showed] a large kidney
stone that would probably need excision or pulverization.
On exam [the patient] was found to have exquisite flank
pain.
The reporter
documented the findings and sent the patient to the Urology
Clinic. Half an hour later, the reporter read that clinic's
intake note:
- The
note made no mention about kidney stones, only that the
patient complained of back pains and had some incontinence.
[The nurse] obviously never read my consult or my note.
Later
the reporter checked the physician's progress notes for that
clinic visit.
- [The
physician] indicated that the patient complained of incontinence
and ... placed the patient on ditropan and scheduled [the
next] appointment for 6 months. [That physician] did not
read my progress notes, or the consult I sent.
Through
an intermediary contact, the patient saw another physician
who scheduled a lithotripsy.
To
Be or Not to Be a PEG Tube
A PSRS
reporter was concerned about confusing orders written for
a dialysis patient. A physician incorrectly identified the
patient's CAPD catheter as a PEG tube for enterostomy (gastric)
feedings, and wrote an order to use the CAPD catheter as a
feeding tube. The reporter noted the reason that such an order
posed a risk:
- A
CAPD catheter is for intra-abdominal peritoneal dialysis.
It is never used for anything but dialysis and must be very,
very clean to prevent acute bacterial infection in the belly.
Although
the progress notes did not record that the CAPD catheter was
used for feedings or administering medications, it had been
modified:
- It
appeared the tube had been used for other than dialysis
because there was a three-way stopcock on the tube. A three-way
stopcock is not part of equipment for intra-abdominal peritoneal
dialysis.
Small
Note, Large Effect
A PSRS
reporter described a situation where responding to a lab value
without awareness of a critical qualifying note led to an
unneeded clinical intervention.
- Patient
remained hypokalemic (reflecting poor nutrition), requiring
some potassium supplementation, potassium repeatedly in
the range of 3.3 - 3.6.
A later
potassium value showed a marked change:
- Potassium
of 5.8 noted on daily labs, interpreted as new hyperkalemia.
Potassium treated with Kayexelate. Potassium next am was
2.
However,
the lab result was inaccurate, due to hemolysis of the specimen:
- Lab
results noted that this specimen was grossly hemolyzed,
but this notation is small, at the bottom of the sheet,
and was not copied over to the progress note during the
copy/paste process.
The reporter
recommended:
- Hemolyzed
specimens should be reported as such, without a value, with
notification to repeat the test.
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