Episode 310: 309. Hospital-Associated Venous Thromboembolism Prophylaxis Use by Risk Assessment

Episode 310: 309. Hospital-Associated Venous Thromboembolism Prophylaxis Use by Risk Assessment

https://shmpublications.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/jhm.13350


Xu J et al. Hospital-associated venous thromboembolism prophylaxis use by risk assessment at a large integrated health care network in Northern California. J Hosp Med 2024 Jun; 19:449.



Authors took 850,000 adult nonsurgical, non–intensive care unit (ICU) hospitalizations at 21 Kaiser Permanente hospitals in northern California, and did a retrospective study of inpatient pharmacologic VTE prophylaxis, investigators compared risk assessment by admitting physicians with risk assessment according to electronic health record (EHR)-

The EHR used the Padua prediction score which basically ask yes or no questions like does the pt have active cancer, previous vte, reduce mobility, elderly age, heart or resp failure. All questions that could need a human to fill out but also with could AI or HER should be answered without humans doing anything.



In 82% of 850,000 adult nonsurgical, non–intensive care unit (ICU) hospitalizations, the EHR categorized patients as low risk (i.e., not meeting indications for pharmacologic VTE prophylaxis); however, 42% of such patients (≈300,000 patients) received pharmacologic VTE prophylaxis. Among the 18% of hospitalizations where Padua score assessments indicated high risk (i.e., met indications for pharmacologic VTE prophylaxis), only one third received pharmacologic VTE prophylaxis.

There was years of making sure people give VTE but maybe we have went to far but the only way to solve this problem is give doctors fewer patient and more time or make it incorporated into the HER automatically. Make it idiot proof.

Hospitals should begin to incorporate better validated tools within EHRs to guide clinical decision-making for inpatient VTE prophylaxis. But even without such tools, clinicians should be vigilant in applying pharmacologic VTE prophylaxis in high-risk patients and minimizing its use in patients at low risk.

Jaksot(385)

15. Clinical Testing

15. Clinical Testing

An overview of a few studies and information regarding inpatient and outpatient testing. "The first principle of solid wisdom is discretion.." --Norman MacDonald. A little discussion on understanding ...

21 Loka 201432min

14. IV Fluids part 2

14. IV Fluids part 2

Bottoms up on the last discussion on fluids and a review of a few of the trials that contribute to the current mindset in EBM. Andrew creates his own "Mike Tyson Theory of fluids" and Joe subscribes t...

3 Loka 201424min

13. IV Fluids part 1

13. IV Fluids part 1

A quick discussion one the topic of which patient to give which fluid. Review of studies from the 90s to 2014 with demographics including pre/post Operative, Septic patient and even Rattus Rattus. (th...

25 Syys 201423min

12. Dexa Scan Part 2

12. Dexa Scan Part 2

Hard topic and difficult discussion continues about reasonable intervention and evaluation of therapy for osteoporosis. Andrew starts right off with his personal recommendation on the screening of low...

10 Syys 20147min

11. The Dexa Scam

11. The Dexa Scam

Hard hitting discussion on the evidence on soft bones and the best screening and treatment options. This episode was broken into two parts because Joe needed to run a full NIH Stroke Scale on Andrew m...

1 Syys 201429min

10. Vitamin D Part 2

10. Vitamin D Part 2

Who and when to test. Dose and frequency along with route of administration of Vitamin D are discussed along with 12 studies of outcomes and complications/benefits of each. Joe discovers Andrew is bel...

13 Elo 201431min

8. Watch Were You Are Putting Your Hands...

8. Watch Were You Are Putting Your Hands...

You might be outside the guidelines soon. Joe and Andrew discuss the newest recommendations from ACP regarding bimanual/pelvic exams. Andrew can't hold it any longer and breaks into song for the first...

6 Heinä 201434min

7. Diabetes. It's Not Over Until the Intervals Are Over.

7. Diabetes. It's Not Over Until the Intervals Are Over.

Don't celebrate just yet, the confidence intervals aren't all the way over the line. Andrew gives yet another history lesson on the improvements in Diabetes and runs over some of the recent talk abou...

23 Kesä 201430min

Suosittua kategoriassa Terveys ja hyvinvointi

unicast
tiedenaiset-podcast
psykopodiaa-podcast
voi-hyvin-meditaatiot-2
rss-pitaisko-erota
vakeva-elama-viisaampi-mieli-vahvempi-keho
rss-pt-paahtio
rss-kuumilla-aalloilla
rss-narsisti
meditaatiot-suomeksi
puhu-muru
selviytyjat-tarinoita-elamasta
terapiassa
junnut-pelissa
rss-nautinto
rss-en-saa-unta
fitnesskulmapodcast
rss-uplevel-by-sonja-hannus
rss-duodecim-lehti
rss-mighty-finland-podcast