1. Intelligent checklists improve checklist compliance in the intensive care unit: a prospective before-and-after mixed-method study.
- Author
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De Bie AJR, Mestrom E, Compagner W, Nan S, van Genugten L, Dellimore K, Eerden J, van Leeuwen S, van de Pol H, Schuling F, Lu X, Bindels AJGH, Bouwman ARA, and Korsten EHHM
- Subjects
- Attitude to Computers, Benchmarking standards, Guideline Adherence standards, Health Status, Humans, Length of Stay, Patient Safety, Practice Guidelines as Topic standards, Prospective Studies, Quality Improvement standards, Quality Indicators, Health Care standards, Artificial Intelligence, Checklist, Critical Care standards, Decision Support Systems, Clinical, Intensive Care Units standards, Paper, Practice Patterns, Physicians' standards, Teaching Rounds standards
- Abstract
Background: We examined whether a context and process-sensitive 'intelligent' checklist increases compliance with best practice compared with a paper checklist during intensive care ward rounds., Methods: We conducted a single-centre prospective before-and-after mixed-method trial in a 35 bed medical and surgical ICU. Daily ICU ward rounds were observed during two periods of 8 weeks. We compared paper checklists (control) with a dynamic (digital) clinical checklist (DCC, intervention). The primary outcome was compliance with best clinical practice, measured as the percentages of checked items and unchecked critical items. Secondary outcomes included ICU stay and the usability of digital checklists. Data are presented as median (interquartile range)., Results: Clinical characteristics and severity of critical illness were similar during both control and intervention periods of study. A total of 36 clinicians visited 197 patients during 352 ward rounds using the paper checklist, compared with 211 patients during 366 ward rounds using the DCC. Per ICU round, a median of 100% of items (94.4-100.0) were completed by DCC, compared with 75.1% (66.7-86.4) by paper checklist (P=0.03). No critical items remained unchecked by the DCC, compared with 15.4% (8.3-27.3) by the paper checklist (P=0.01). The DCC was associated with reduced ICU stay (1 day [1-3]), compared with the paper checklist (2 days [1-4]; P=0.05). Usability of the DCC was judged by clinicians to require further improvement., Conclusions: A digital checklist improved compliance with best clinical practice, compared with a paper checklist, during ward rounds on a mixed ICU., Clinical Trial Registration: NCT03599856., (Copyright © 2020 British Journal of Anaesthesia. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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