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Health Technology Assessment of a new water quality monitoring technology: Impact of automation, digitalization and remoteness in dialysis units

BACKGROUND: Water quality monitoring at the dialysis units (DU) is essential to ensure an appropriate dialysis fluid quality and guarantee an optimal and safe dialysis treatment to patients. This paper aims to evaluate the effectiveness, economic and organizational impact of automation, digitalizati...

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Autores principales: García-Lorenzo, Borja, Fernández-Barceló, Carla, Maduell, Francisco, Sampietro-Colom, Laura
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7906308/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33630930
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0247450
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author García-Lorenzo, Borja
Fernández-Barceló, Carla
Maduell, Francisco
Sampietro-Colom, Laura
author_facet García-Lorenzo, Borja
Fernández-Barceló, Carla
Maduell, Francisco
Sampietro-Colom, Laura
author_sort García-Lorenzo, Borja
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Water quality monitoring at the dialysis units (DU) is essential to ensure an appropriate dialysis fluid quality and guarantee an optimal and safe dialysis treatment to patients. This paper aims to evaluate the effectiveness, economic and organizational impact of automation, digitalization and remote water quality monitoring, through a New Water Technology (NWT) at a hospital DU to produce dialysis water, compared to a Conventional Water Technology (CWT). METHODS: A before-and-after study was carried out at the Hospital Clínic Barcelona. Data on CWT was collected during 1-year (control) and 7-month for the NWT (case). Data on water quality, resource use and unit cost were retrospective and prospectively collected. A comparative effectiveness analysis on the compliance rate of quality water parameters with the international guidelines between the NWT and the CWT was conducted. This was followed by a cost-minimization analysis and an organizational impact from the hospital perspective. An extensive deterministic sensitivity analysis was also performed. RESULTS: The NWT compared to the CWT showed no differences on effectiveness measured as the compliance rate on international requirements on water quality (100% vs. 100%), but the NWT yielded savings of 3,599 EUR/year compared to the CWT. The NWT offered more data accuracy (daily measures: 6 vs. 1 and missing data: 0 vs. 20 days/year), optimization of the DU employees’ workload (attendance to DU: 4 vs. 19 days/month) and workflow, through the remote and continuous monitoring, reliability of data and process regarding audits for quality control. CONCLUSIONS: While the compliance of international recommendations on continuous monitoring was performed with the CWT, the NWT was efficient compared to the CWT, mainly due to the travel time needed by the technical operator to attend the DU. These results were scalable to other economic contexts. Nonetheless, they should be taken with caution either when the NWT equipment/maintenance cost are largely increased, or the workforce involvement is diminished.
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spelling pubmed-79063082021-03-03 Health Technology Assessment of a new water quality monitoring technology: Impact of automation, digitalization and remoteness in dialysis units García-Lorenzo, Borja Fernández-Barceló, Carla Maduell, Francisco Sampietro-Colom, Laura PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Water quality monitoring at the dialysis units (DU) is essential to ensure an appropriate dialysis fluid quality and guarantee an optimal and safe dialysis treatment to patients. This paper aims to evaluate the effectiveness, economic and organizational impact of automation, digitalization and remote water quality monitoring, through a New Water Technology (NWT) at a hospital DU to produce dialysis water, compared to a Conventional Water Technology (CWT). METHODS: A before-and-after study was carried out at the Hospital Clínic Barcelona. Data on CWT was collected during 1-year (control) and 7-month for the NWT (case). Data on water quality, resource use and unit cost were retrospective and prospectively collected. A comparative effectiveness analysis on the compliance rate of quality water parameters with the international guidelines between the NWT and the CWT was conducted. This was followed by a cost-minimization analysis and an organizational impact from the hospital perspective. An extensive deterministic sensitivity analysis was also performed. RESULTS: The NWT compared to the CWT showed no differences on effectiveness measured as the compliance rate on international requirements on water quality (100% vs. 100%), but the NWT yielded savings of 3,599 EUR/year compared to the CWT. The NWT offered more data accuracy (daily measures: 6 vs. 1 and missing data: 0 vs. 20 days/year), optimization of the DU employees’ workload (attendance to DU: 4 vs. 19 days/month) and workflow, through the remote and continuous monitoring, reliability of data and process regarding audits for quality control. CONCLUSIONS: While the compliance of international recommendations on continuous monitoring was performed with the CWT, the NWT was efficient compared to the CWT, mainly due to the travel time needed by the technical operator to attend the DU. These results were scalable to other economic contexts. Nonetheless, they should be taken with caution either when the NWT equipment/maintenance cost are largely increased, or the workforce involvement is diminished. Public Library of Science 2021-02-25 /pmc/articles/PMC7906308/ /pubmed/33630930 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0247450 Text en © 2021 García-Lorenzo et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
García-Lorenzo, Borja
Fernández-Barceló, Carla
Maduell, Francisco
Sampietro-Colom, Laura
Health Technology Assessment of a new water quality monitoring technology: Impact of automation, digitalization and remoteness in dialysis units
title Health Technology Assessment of a new water quality monitoring technology: Impact of automation, digitalization and remoteness in dialysis units
title_full Health Technology Assessment of a new water quality monitoring technology: Impact of automation, digitalization and remoteness in dialysis units
title_fullStr Health Technology Assessment of a new water quality monitoring technology: Impact of automation, digitalization and remoteness in dialysis units
title_full_unstemmed Health Technology Assessment of a new water quality monitoring technology: Impact of automation, digitalization and remoteness in dialysis units
title_short Health Technology Assessment of a new water quality monitoring technology: Impact of automation, digitalization and remoteness in dialysis units
title_sort health technology assessment of a new water quality monitoring technology: impact of automation, digitalization and remoteness in dialysis units
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7906308/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33630930
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0247450
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