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Electronic Health Record-Assisted Reflex Urine Culture Testing Improves Emergency Department Diagnostic Efficiency.

Ryan F CoughlinDavid PeaperCraig RothenbergMarjorie GoldenMarie-Louise LandryJeffrey CottonVivek ParwaniMarc ShapiroAndrew UlrichArjun K Venkatesh
Published in: American journal of medical quality : the official journal of the American College of Medical Quality (2019)
The authors evaluated the effectiveness of an electronic health record (EHR)-based reflex urine culture testing algorithm on urine test utilization and diagnostic yield in the emergency department (ED). The study implemented a reflex urine culture order with EHR decision support. The primary outcome was the number of urine culture orders per 100 ED visits. The secondary outcome was the diagnostic yield of urine cultures. After the intervention, the mean number of urine cultures ordered was 5.95 fewer per 100 ED visits (9.3 vs 15.2), and there was a decrease in normal, or negative, cultures by 2.42 per 100 ED visits. There also was a statistically significant decrease in urine culture utilization and an increase in the positive proportion of cultures. Simple EHR clinical decision-support tools along with reflex urine culture testing can significantly reduce the number of urine cultures performed while improving diagnostic yield in the ED.
Keyphrases
  • emergency department
  • electronic health record
  • clinical decision support
  • randomized controlled trial
  • systematic review