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Development, testing, and refining the failure to rescue sepsis sniffer

$42,926R36FY2013HSAHRQ

Mayo Clinic Rochester, Rochester MN

Investigators

Linked publications, trials & patents

Abstract

DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): The purpose of this project is to develop, test, and refine an automated alert system to notify healthcare providers following failure to respond to sepsis in an appropriate and timely fashion. Because the majority of patients diagnosed with sepsis are elderly, this disease disproportionately impacts individuals with special health care needs, including the disabled, chronically ill, and those facing end-of-life. However, any patient can develop sepsis and require critical care hospitalization. Therefore, this project is relevant t the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality's mission to improve the quality, safety, efficiency, and effectiveness of health care for all Americans. Background: A major challenge in treating critical care patients is delay in initiating appropriate therapy upon sepsis diagnosis. Further, even when prompt therapy is initiated, it may be incomplete, inadequate, and/or hampered by provider error. Failure to respond to sepsis after diagnosis in a timely and appropriate manner can lead to complications, including organ dysfunction, refractory hypotension, multiple organ dysfunction syndrome, and death. Solution: Timely administration of appropriate therapy after diagnosis of sepsis has been demonstrated to significantly improve patient outcomes. With this in mind, our hypothesis is that an automated alert system for detecting failure to rescue after sepsis diagnosis can reduce time to achieve appropriate response in the ICU setting and thereby improve outcomes. The goal of this proposal is to develop and test an automated alert system for the detection of failure to rescue after sepsis diagnosis. To do this, we propose the following three specific aims: (1) improve the diagnostic performance of an existing severe sepsis sniffer (2) test different modes of automated alert delivery in experiment, and (3) pilot real-time testing of an improved severe sepsis alert system using the hospital electronic medical record. Our methods will include algorithm optimization, simulated experiment, and prospective testing in the critical care setting. The long-term goal of this proposal is to exploit this technology to improve patient outcomes and reduce overall adverse occurrence rates. This knowledge is significant as it will lay the foundation for the development of increasingly sophisticated automated detection systems to enhance the ability of providers to improve patient outcomes and reduce patient mortality.

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