Design, development, implementation, and evaluation of a severe drug-drug interaction alert system in the ICU: An analysis of acceptance and override rates.

Int J Med Inform

Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Department of Health Information Management, Health Human Resources Research Center, School of Management & Medical Information Sciences, Shiraz, Iran. Electronic address:

Published: September 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Scientists found that doctors in Intensive Care Units often ignore warnings about dangerous drug interactions, so they created a special alert system to help.
  • They checked how well this system worked in a big hospital and discovered that most doctors followed its alerts, with only a small percentage ignoring them.
  • The new alert system had a good user experience score, but the researchers believe more studies are needed to see how effective it is in other hospitals.

Article Abstract

Background And Objective: The override rate of Drug-Drug Interaction Alerts (DDIA) in Intensive Care Units (ICUs) is very high. Therefore, this study aimed to design, develop, implement, and evaluate a severe Drug-Drug Alert System (DDIAS) in a system of ICUs and measure the override rate of this system.

Methods: This is a cross-sectional study that details the design, development, implementation, and evaluation of a DDIAS for severe interactions into a Computerized Provider Order Entry (CPOE) system in the ICUs of Nemazee general teaching hospitals in 2021. The patients exposed to the volume of DDIAS, acceptance and overridden of DDIAS, and usability of DDIAS have been collected. The study was approved by the local Institutional Review Board (IRB) and; the ethics committee of Shiraz University of Medical Science on date: 2019-11-23 (Approval ID: IR.SUMS.REC.1398.1046).

Results: The knowledge base of the DDIAS contains 9,809 severe potential drug-drug interactions (pDDIs). A total of 2672 medications were prescribed in the population study. The volume and acceptance rate for the DDIAS were 81 % and 97.5 %, respectively. The override rate was 2.5 %. The mean System Usability Scale (SUS) score of the DDIAS was 75.

Conclusion: This study demonstrates that implementing high-risk DDIAS at the point of prescribing in ICUs improves adherence to alerts. In addition, the usability of the DDIAS was reasonable. Further studies are needed to investigate the establishment of severe DDIAS and measure the prescribers' response to DDIAS on a larger scale.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2023.105135DOI Listing

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