2017
DOI: 10.1136/bmjqs-2017-006898
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Standard admission order sets promote ordering of unnecessary investigations: a quasi-randomised evaluation in a simulated setting

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Cited by 11 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Other order sets can place tests that are not always required based on patient presentation, often leading to inappropriate ordering. As described by Leis et al, a standard order set in the CCU contained BNP and TSH and were often ordered on admission without clinical indication. They removed the lab tests from a test order set and noted that TSH and BNP were no longer ordered or added on to patients’ blood work.…”
Section: Forcing Functionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other order sets can place tests that are not always required based on patient presentation, often leading to inappropriate ordering. As described by Leis et al, a standard order set in the CCU contained BNP and TSH and were often ordered on admission without clinical indication. They removed the lab tests from a test order set and noted that TSH and BNP were no longer ordered or added on to patients’ blood work.…”
Section: Forcing Functionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The first was that a solution as simple as order set design can have a large impact, without the undesirable consequences of alarm fatigue/popup fatigue/change fatigue. Two recent studies demonstrated how the mere presence of an order on an admission order set makes it inherently more likely to be ordered 11 12. Interventions explored in the literature had either a modest (policy change alone) or unsustained (education alone) effect, or required a significant amount of effort to upkeep (audit and feedback).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Munigala et al 17 found that removing urine tests other than the default test from the 'frequently ordered' window of the emergency department electronic order set decreased ordering of urine cultures. Leis e t al 18 found that whether or not a test was included as part of a standard admission order set strongly influenced whether the test was ordered at all even if there was no explicit prohibition on ordering it. Our study adds important data to this literature; it is the only randomised controlled trial that we are aware of to study the use of default option nudges in a clinical context, although through the use of vignettes.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%