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Evaluation of a behavioural intervention to reduce perioperative midazolam administration to older adults

BACKGROUND: Older patients commonly receive benzodiazepines during anaesthesia despite guidelines recommending avoidance. Interventions to reduce perioperative benzodiazepine use are not well studied. We hypothesized an automated electronic medical record alert targeting anaesthesia providers would...

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Autores principales: Seki, Scott, Candon, Molly, Murthy, Sushila, Sahota, Gurmukh, Kelz, Rachel R., Neuman, Mark D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10457488/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37638081
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bjao.2023.100206
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author Seki, Scott
Candon, Molly
Murthy, Sushila
Sahota, Gurmukh
Kelz, Rachel R.
Neuman, Mark D.
author_facet Seki, Scott
Candon, Molly
Murthy, Sushila
Sahota, Gurmukh
Kelz, Rachel R.
Neuman, Mark D.
author_sort Seki, Scott
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Older patients commonly receive benzodiazepines during anaesthesia despite guidelines recommending avoidance. Interventions to reduce perioperative benzodiazepine use are not well studied. We hypothesized an automated electronic medical record alert targeting anaesthesia providers would reduce administration of benzodiazepines to older adults undergoing general anaesthesia. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective study of adults who underwent surgery at 5 hospitals within one US academic health system. One of the hospitals received an intervention consisting of provider education and an automated electronic medical record alert discouraging benzodiazepine administration to patients aged 70 years or older. We used difference-in-differences analysis to compare patterns of midazolam use 12-months before and after intervention at the intervention hospital, using the 4 non-intervention hospitals as contemporaneous comparators. RESULTS: The primary analysis sample included 20,347 cases among patients aged 70 and older. At the intervention hospital, midazolam was administered in 454/4,240 (10.7%) cases pre-alert versus 250/3,750 (6.7%) post-alert (p<0.001). At comparator hospitals, respective rates were 3,186/6,366 (50.0%) versus 2,935/5,991 (49.0%) (p=0.24). After adjustment, the intervention was associated with a 3.2 percentage point (p.p.) reduction in the percentage of cases with midazolam administration (95% CI: (-5.2, -1.1); p=0.002). Midazolam dose was unaffected (adjusted mean difference -0.01 mg, 95% CI: (-0.20, 0.18); p=0.90). In 76,735 cases among patients aged 18–69, the percentage of cases with midazolam administration decreased by 6.9 p. p. (95% CI: (-8.0, -5.7); p<0.001). CONCLUSION: Provider-facing alerts in the intraoperative electronic medical record, coupled with education, can reduce midazolam administration to older patients presenting for surgery but may affect care of younger patients.
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spelling pubmed-104574882023-08-27 Evaluation of a behavioural intervention to reduce perioperative midazolam administration to older adults Seki, Scott Candon, Molly Murthy, Sushila Sahota, Gurmukh Kelz, Rachel R. Neuman, Mark D. BJA Open Quality Improvement Studies BACKGROUND: Older patients commonly receive benzodiazepines during anaesthesia despite guidelines recommending avoidance. Interventions to reduce perioperative benzodiazepine use are not well studied. We hypothesized an automated electronic medical record alert targeting anaesthesia providers would reduce administration of benzodiazepines to older adults undergoing general anaesthesia. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective study of adults who underwent surgery at 5 hospitals within one US academic health system. One of the hospitals received an intervention consisting of provider education and an automated electronic medical record alert discouraging benzodiazepine administration to patients aged 70 years or older. We used difference-in-differences analysis to compare patterns of midazolam use 12-months before and after intervention at the intervention hospital, using the 4 non-intervention hospitals as contemporaneous comparators. RESULTS: The primary analysis sample included 20,347 cases among patients aged 70 and older. At the intervention hospital, midazolam was administered in 454/4,240 (10.7%) cases pre-alert versus 250/3,750 (6.7%) post-alert (p<0.001). At comparator hospitals, respective rates were 3,186/6,366 (50.0%) versus 2,935/5,991 (49.0%) (p=0.24). After adjustment, the intervention was associated with a 3.2 percentage point (p.p.) reduction in the percentage of cases with midazolam administration (95% CI: (-5.2, -1.1); p=0.002). Midazolam dose was unaffected (adjusted mean difference -0.01 mg, 95% CI: (-0.20, 0.18); p=0.90). In 76,735 cases among patients aged 18–69, the percentage of cases with midazolam administration decreased by 6.9 p. p. (95% CI: (-8.0, -5.7); p<0.001). CONCLUSION: Provider-facing alerts in the intraoperative electronic medical record, coupled with education, can reduce midazolam administration to older patients presenting for surgery but may affect care of younger patients. Elsevier 2023-07-11 /pmc/articles/PMC10457488/ /pubmed/37638081 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bjao.2023.100206 Text en © 2023 The Author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Quality Improvement Studies
Seki, Scott
Candon, Molly
Murthy, Sushila
Sahota, Gurmukh
Kelz, Rachel R.
Neuman, Mark D.
Evaluation of a behavioural intervention to reduce perioperative midazolam administration to older adults
title Evaluation of a behavioural intervention to reduce perioperative midazolam administration to older adults
title_full Evaluation of a behavioural intervention to reduce perioperative midazolam administration to older adults
title_fullStr Evaluation of a behavioural intervention to reduce perioperative midazolam administration to older adults
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of a behavioural intervention to reduce perioperative midazolam administration to older adults
title_short Evaluation of a behavioural intervention to reduce perioperative midazolam administration to older adults
title_sort evaluation of a behavioural intervention to reduce perioperative midazolam administration to older adults
topic Quality Improvement Studies
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10457488/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37638081
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bjao.2023.100206
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