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Beyond Reporting Early Warning Score Sensitivity: The Temporal Relationship and Clinical Relevance of “True Positive” Alerts that Precede Critical Deterioration

Journal of Hospital Medicine 14(3). 2019 March;:138-143. Published online first August 29, 2018. | 10.12788/jhm.3066

BACKGROUND: Clinical deterioration is difficult to detect in hospitalized children. The pediatric Rothman Index (pRI) is an early warning score that incorporates vital signs, laboratory studies, and nursing assessments to generate deterioration alerts.
OBJECTIVES: (1) Evaluate the timing of pRI alerts and clinicians recognizing deterioration or escalating care prior to critical deterioration events (CDEs) and (2) determine whether the parameters triggering alerts were clinically related to deterioration.
DESIGN: CDEs are unplanned transfers to the intensive care unit with noninvasive ventilation, tracheal intubation, and/or vasopressor infusion in the 12 hours after transfer. Using one year of data from a large freestanding children’s hospital without the pRI, we analyzed CDEs that would have been preceded by pRI alerts. We (1) compared the timing of pRI alerts to time-stamped notes describing changes in patient status and orders reflecting escalations of care and (2) identified score component(s) that caused alerts to trigger and determined whether these were clinically related to CDE etiology.
RESULTS: Fifty CDEs would have triggered pRI alerts if the pRI had been in use (sensitivity 68%). In 90% of CDEs, the first clinician note reflecting change in patient status and/or the first order reflecting escalation of care preceded the first pRI alert. All of the vital sign and laboratory components of the pRI and 51% of the nursing components were clinically related to the etiology of the CDE.
CONCLUSIONS: Evidence that clinicians were aware of deterioration preceded pRI alerts in most CDEs that generated alerts in the preceding 24 hours.

© 2018 Society of Hospital Medicine.

CONCLUSIONS

In most patients who had a CDE at a large freestanding children’s hospital, escalation orders or documented changes in patient status would have occurred before a pRI alert. However, in a minority of patients, the alert could have contributed to the detection of deterioration that was not previously evident.

Disclosures

The authors have nothing to disclose

Funding

The study was supported by funds from the Department of Biomedical and Health Informatics at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. PeraHealth, the company that sells the Rothman Index software, provided a service to the investigators but no funding. They applied their proprietary scoring algorithm to the data from Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia to generate alerts retrospectively. This service was provided free of charge in 2014 during the time period when Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia was considering purchasing and implementing PeraHealth software, which it subsequently did. We did not receive any funding for the study from PeraHealth. PeraHealth personnel did not influence the study design, the interpretation of data, the writing of the report, or the decision to submit the article for publication.

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