Association between limiting the number of open records in a tele-critical care setting and retract-reorder errors

J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2021 Jul 30;28(8):1791-1795. doi: 10.1093/jamia/ocab072.

Abstract

Background: Wrong patient selection errors may be tracked by retract-reorder (RAR) events. The aim of this quality improvement study was to assess the impact of reducing the number of concurrently open electronic health records from 4 to 2 on RAR errors generated by a tele-critical care service.

Methods: The study encompassed 32 months before and 21 months after restriction. Chi-Square test of proportions and T statistical process control chart for rare events were used.

Results: There were 156 318 orders with 57 RAR errors (36.5/100 000 orders) before restriction, and 122 587 orders with 34 errors (27.7/100 000 orders) after. Rates were not statistically different (P = .20), but analysis was underpowered. When plotted on a T control chart, random variation was detected between RAR errors.

Conclusion: We found no significant difference in RAR errors in the tele-critical care setting after open record limitation. Other strategies should be studied to reduce wrong patient selection errors.

Keywords: information technology; medical errors; medical order entry systems; patient safety; telemedicine.

MeSH terms

  • Critical Care
  • Electronic Health Records*
  • Humans
  • Quality Improvement*