Author
Atia, JoleneEvison, Felicity
Gallier, Suzy
Hewins, Peter
Ball, Simon
Gavin, Joseph
Coleman, Jamie
Garrick, Mark
Pankhurst, Tanya
Publication date
2023-01-17Subject
Urology
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Background: Electronic alerts (e-alerts) for Acute Kidney Injury (AKI) have been implemented into a variety of different Electronic Health Records (EHR) systems worldwide in order to improve recognition and encourage early appropriate management of AKI. We were interested in the impact on patient safety, specialist referral and clinical management. Methods: All patients admitted to our institution with AKI were included in the study. We studied AKI progression, dialysis dependency, length of hospital stay, emergency readmission, ICU readmission, and death, before and after the introduction of electronic alerts. The impact on prescription of high risk drugs, fluid administration, and referral to renal services was also analysed. Results: After the introduction of the e-alert, progression to higher AKI stage, emergency readmission to hospital and death during admission were significantly reduced. More prescriptions were stopped for drugs that adversely affect renal function in AKI and there was a significant increase in the ICU admissions and in the number of patients having dialysis, especially in earlier stages. Longer term mortality, renal referrals, and fluid alteration did not change significantly after the AKI e-alert introduction.Citation
Atia J, Evison F, Gallier S, Hewins P, Ball S, Gavin J, Coleman J, Garrick M, Pankhurst T. Does acute kidney injury alerting improve patient outcomes? BMC Nephrol. 2023 Jan 17;24(1):14. doi: 10.1186/s12882-022-03031-yType
ArticlePMID
36647011Journal
BMC NephrologyPublisher
BMCae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1186/s12882-022-03031-y