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Evaluation of a Clinical Decision Support Strategy to Increase Seasonal Influenza Vaccination Among Hospitalized Children Before Inpatient Discharge

IMPORTANCE: Hospitalized children are at increased risk of influenza-related complications, yet influenza vaccine coverage remains low among this group. Evidence-based strategies about vaccination of vulnerable children during all health care visits are especially important during the COVID-19 pande...

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Autores principales: Orenstein, Evan W., ElSayed-Ali, Omar, Kandaswamy, Swaminathan, Masterson, Erin, Blanco, Reena, Shah, Pareen, Lantis, Patricia, Kolwaite, Amy, Dawson, Thomas E., Ray, Edwin, Bryant, Christy, Iyer, Srikant, Shane, Andi L., Jernigan, Stephanie
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Medical Association 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8299313/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34292335
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.17809
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author Orenstein, Evan W.
ElSayed-Ali, Omar
Kandaswamy, Swaminathan
Masterson, Erin
Blanco, Reena
Shah, Pareen
Lantis, Patricia
Kolwaite, Amy
Dawson, Thomas E.
Ray, Edwin
Bryant, Christy
Iyer, Srikant
Shane, Andi L.
Jernigan, Stephanie
author_facet Orenstein, Evan W.
ElSayed-Ali, Omar
Kandaswamy, Swaminathan
Masterson, Erin
Blanco, Reena
Shah, Pareen
Lantis, Patricia
Kolwaite, Amy
Dawson, Thomas E.
Ray, Edwin
Bryant, Christy
Iyer, Srikant
Shane, Andi L.
Jernigan, Stephanie
author_sort Orenstein, Evan W.
collection PubMed
description IMPORTANCE: Hospitalized children are at increased risk of influenza-related complications, yet influenza vaccine coverage remains low among this group. Evidence-based strategies about vaccination of vulnerable children during all health care visits are especially important during the COVID-19 pandemic. OBJECTIVE: To design and evaluate a clinical decision support (CDS) strategy to increase the proportion of eligible hospitalized children who receive a seasonal influenza vaccine prior to inpatient discharge. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This quality improvement study was conducted among children eligible for the seasonal influenza vaccine who were hospitalized in a tertiary pediatric health system providing care to more than half a million patients annually in 3 hospitals. The study used a sequential crossover design from control to intervention and compared hospitalizations in the intervention group (2019-2020 season with the use of an intervention order set) with concurrent controls (2019-2020 season without use of an intervention order set) and historical controls (2018-2019 season with use of an order set that underwent intervention during the 2019-2020 season). INTERVENTIONS: A CDS intervention was developed through a user-centered design process, including (1) placing a default influenza vaccine order into admission order sets for eligible patients, (2) a script to offer the vaccine using a presumptive strategy, and (3) just-in-time education for clinicians addressing vaccine eligibility in the influenza order group with links to further reference material. The intervention was rolled out in a stepwise fashion during the 2019-2020 influenza season. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Proportion of eligible hospitalizations in which 1 or more influenza vaccines were administered prior to discharge. RESULTS: Among 17 740 hospitalizations (9295 boys [52%]), the mean (SD) age was 8.0 (6.0) years, and the patients were predominantly Black (n = 8943 [50%]) or White (n = 7559 [43%]) and mostly had public insurance (n = 11 274 [64%]). There were 10 997 hospitalizations eligible for the influenza vaccine in the 2019-2020 season. Of these, 5449 (50%) were in the intervention group, and 5548 (50%) were concurrent controls. There were 6743 eligible hospitalizations in 2018-2019 that served as historical controls. Vaccine administration rates were 31% (n = 1676) in the intervention group, 19% (n = 1051) in concurrent controls, and 14% (n = 912) in historical controls (P < .001). In adjusted analyses, the odds of receiving the influenza vaccine were 3.25 (95% CI, 2.94-3.59) times higher in the intervention group and 1.28 (95% CI, 1.15-1.42) times higher in concurrent controls than in historical controls. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: This quality improvement study suggests that user-centered CDS may be associated with significantly improved influenza vaccination rates among hospitalized children. Stepwise implementation of CDS interventions was a practical method that was used to increase quality improvement rigor through comparison with historical and concurrent controls.
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spelling pubmed-82993132021-08-12 Evaluation of a Clinical Decision Support Strategy to Increase Seasonal Influenza Vaccination Among Hospitalized Children Before Inpatient Discharge Orenstein, Evan W. ElSayed-Ali, Omar Kandaswamy, Swaminathan Masterson, Erin Blanco, Reena Shah, Pareen Lantis, Patricia Kolwaite, Amy Dawson, Thomas E. Ray, Edwin Bryant, Christy Iyer, Srikant Shane, Andi L. Jernigan, Stephanie JAMA Netw Open Original Investigation IMPORTANCE: Hospitalized children are at increased risk of influenza-related complications, yet influenza vaccine coverage remains low among this group. Evidence-based strategies about vaccination of vulnerable children during all health care visits are especially important during the COVID-19 pandemic. OBJECTIVE: To design and evaluate a clinical decision support (CDS) strategy to increase the proportion of eligible hospitalized children who receive a seasonal influenza vaccine prior to inpatient discharge. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This quality improvement study was conducted among children eligible for the seasonal influenza vaccine who were hospitalized in a tertiary pediatric health system providing care to more than half a million patients annually in 3 hospitals. The study used a sequential crossover design from control to intervention and compared hospitalizations in the intervention group (2019-2020 season with the use of an intervention order set) with concurrent controls (2019-2020 season without use of an intervention order set) and historical controls (2018-2019 season with use of an order set that underwent intervention during the 2019-2020 season). INTERVENTIONS: A CDS intervention was developed through a user-centered design process, including (1) placing a default influenza vaccine order into admission order sets for eligible patients, (2) a script to offer the vaccine using a presumptive strategy, and (3) just-in-time education for clinicians addressing vaccine eligibility in the influenza order group with links to further reference material. The intervention was rolled out in a stepwise fashion during the 2019-2020 influenza season. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Proportion of eligible hospitalizations in which 1 or more influenza vaccines were administered prior to discharge. RESULTS: Among 17 740 hospitalizations (9295 boys [52%]), the mean (SD) age was 8.0 (6.0) years, and the patients were predominantly Black (n = 8943 [50%]) or White (n = 7559 [43%]) and mostly had public insurance (n = 11 274 [64%]). There were 10 997 hospitalizations eligible for the influenza vaccine in the 2019-2020 season. Of these, 5449 (50%) were in the intervention group, and 5548 (50%) were concurrent controls. There were 6743 eligible hospitalizations in 2018-2019 that served as historical controls. Vaccine administration rates were 31% (n = 1676) in the intervention group, 19% (n = 1051) in concurrent controls, and 14% (n = 912) in historical controls (P < .001). In adjusted analyses, the odds of receiving the influenza vaccine were 3.25 (95% CI, 2.94-3.59) times higher in the intervention group and 1.28 (95% CI, 1.15-1.42) times higher in concurrent controls than in historical controls. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: This quality improvement study suggests that user-centered CDS may be associated with significantly improved influenza vaccination rates among hospitalized children. Stepwise implementation of CDS interventions was a practical method that was used to increase quality improvement rigor through comparison with historical and concurrent controls. American Medical Association 2021-07-22 /pmc/articles/PMC8299313/ /pubmed/34292335 http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.17809 Text en Copyright 2021 Orenstein EW et al. JAMA Network Open. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the CC-BY License.
spellingShingle Original Investigation
Orenstein, Evan W.
ElSayed-Ali, Omar
Kandaswamy, Swaminathan
Masterson, Erin
Blanco, Reena
Shah, Pareen
Lantis, Patricia
Kolwaite, Amy
Dawson, Thomas E.
Ray, Edwin
Bryant, Christy
Iyer, Srikant
Shane, Andi L.
Jernigan, Stephanie
Evaluation of a Clinical Decision Support Strategy to Increase Seasonal Influenza Vaccination Among Hospitalized Children Before Inpatient Discharge
title Evaluation of a Clinical Decision Support Strategy to Increase Seasonal Influenza Vaccination Among Hospitalized Children Before Inpatient Discharge
title_full Evaluation of a Clinical Decision Support Strategy to Increase Seasonal Influenza Vaccination Among Hospitalized Children Before Inpatient Discharge
title_fullStr Evaluation of a Clinical Decision Support Strategy to Increase Seasonal Influenza Vaccination Among Hospitalized Children Before Inpatient Discharge
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of a Clinical Decision Support Strategy to Increase Seasonal Influenza Vaccination Among Hospitalized Children Before Inpatient Discharge
title_short Evaluation of a Clinical Decision Support Strategy to Increase Seasonal Influenza Vaccination Among Hospitalized Children Before Inpatient Discharge
title_sort evaluation of a clinical decision support strategy to increase seasonal influenza vaccination among hospitalized children before inpatient discharge
topic Original Investigation
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8299313/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34292335
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.17809
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