Primum Non Nocere

First, do no harm.  Sounds easy enough, but have you ever ordered a “screening CT?”  Have you ever been “better safe than sorry?”  We’re all aware of the nebulous risk of radiation from the imaging we order, we know that getting stuck for blood hurts, and sometimes medications have side effects, but what happens when the results of tests themselves are the things harming patients?

This article does a great job exploring this question.  I’ve also found patients much more receptive to my explanations as to why I’m not ordering the thing they think they need since reading this and spending some time thinking about it.  There are definitely times when my honest indication for ordering that Head CT is “patient wants it…” but in general this article has pushed me a little closer to the minimalists’ corner.

Overkill – Atul Gawande

Predators

Great discussion of the biases and conflicted interests of medical publication. Here is a fun little news story about one of the predatory journals, which we didn’t even get into. Looking forward to another conference dedicated to reading the literature.

I also meant to introduce everyone present to Belinda Yff, our medical librarian. Not only is she invaluable for assistance with literature search, but she completely caters to the Emergency Physician’s unrealistic expectations of rapid results. She completes and sends me literature searches in a matter of minutes to hours, and can borrow articles from other libraries when we do not have access.

I would strongly recommend everyone saving Belinda’s information and asking for her help with research interests and lecture preparation. Her email address is belinda.yff@louisville.edu.

Just some thoughts on stroke management in the acute setting…

A couple months ago (during lecture), we had a discussion regarding tPA and acute onset of stroke. As you would expect, we discussed the indications, contraindications, etc of treating stroke with tPA. We also touched on the subject of our role in pushing tPA here at UofL.

Obviously as a stroke center, our stroke team is working around the clock- and as such, generally takes the ball on this one. However, when we are practicing outside of UofL, a stroke team is not always going to be available and ultimately the management will fall on us. Hence the discussion and considerations for us making the call or at least working towards that possibility in the future.

Coincidentally, at precisely the same time as this conversation, a small journal, based out of New England, with a primary focus on medicine, published three fine articles on a similar topic. These articles were focused on the treatment of stroke in  the acute setting.

As pertinent to this post, they explored the use of thrombolysis as well as mechanical removal of thrombus when said thrombus is located in a proximal vessel. Now I won’t pretend I can read, but for those of you who can- below, are links to two “previews” and one complete view of the above mentioned articles. Additionally, an audio file is embedded, containing a break down of the articles by Dr. Dave Newman, of the Mt. Sinai School of Medicine in the Department of Emergency Medicine, to be featured on a future episode of EM:Rap.

Ultimately, I guess the questions I have regarding this as a post on Room9er are as follows:

1. I believe the Stroke team has embraced these articles and to my knowledge (as of February) may have moved towards mechanical retrieval of thrombus in proximal vessels in appropriate candidates. If we are trying to move towards a more ED involved decision tree, what will we need to know and where will our policies stem from? At least as a concept. At this time, I have only heard us discuss tPA, but if we as a hospital are moving towards multiple modalities for treatment of acute stroke, should we not be discussing these as well?

2. With consideration of a 6 hour time frame to thrombus retrieval, what is our (UofL) policy on timelines regarding retrieval. (This is not reflecting any current policies, merely one parameter from one study.)

3. How much time is required from page to cath? This is undoubtedly a big question. What does it take to have a vascular team, NES team, etc ready do go. How will this influence our time of onset to treatment guidelines.

4. Outside of UofL, taking into consideration transit time, etc. how will this influence the management of stroke? Based on CTA availability, transit time, local resources, etc.

ESCAPE

EXTEND_IA

MR CLEAN

 

Cardiology

If you’re like me, and I know you are, you wish Martin Espinoza’s lectures were recorded and available. They are. You’re welcome.

Arrythmias

EKG concepts

A fib/flutter

Also, if you haven’t heard yet, the IM department just launched a FOAMed website called Louisville Lectures. It’s one of the first of its kind worldwide and it’s based out of ULH. Michael Burk, who is rotating with us this month from IM, is the founder and managing director. It got a shout-out on LITFL this month. Worth a look.

Keep ’em Happy

Nice little post from EM Lit of Note on how to increase patient satisfaction scores. Hint, has nothing to do with quality medical care.

Patient Satisfaction: It’s Door-to-Room Times (Duh)

As customer satisfaction becomes rapidly enshrined as our reimbursement overlord, we are all eager to improve our satisfaction scores.  And, by scores, I mean: Press Ganey.

So, as with all studies attempting to describe patient satisfaction, we unfortunately depend on the validity of the proprietary Press Ganey measurement instrument.  This limitation acknowledged, these authors at Oregon Health and Science University have conducted a single-center study, retrospectively linking survey results with patient characteristics, and statistically evaluating associations using a linear mixed-effects model.  They report three survey elements:  overall experience, wait time before provider, and likelihood to recommend.

Which patients were most pleased with their experience?  Old, white people who didn’t have to wait very long.  Every additional decade in age increased satisfaction, every hour wait decreased satisfaction, and there was a smattering of other mixed effects based on payor source, ethnicity, and perceived length of stay.  What’s interesting about these results – despite the threats to validity and limitations inherent to a retrospective study – is how much the satisfaction outcomes depend upon non-modifiable factors.  You can actually purchase patient experience consulting from Press Ganey, and they’ll come teach you and your nurses a handful of repackaged common-sense tricks – but I’m happy to save your department the money:  door-to-room times.

Or change your client mix.

Done.

“Associations Between Patient and Emergency Department Operational Characteristics and Patient Satisfaction Scores in an Adult Population”
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25182541

ACEP’s Choosing Wisely campaign

Here’s an excerpt from our ED-Public Health website (http://www.edpublichealth.com):

ACEP’s contributions to the Choosing Wisely Campaign

At ACEP13 last October in Seattle, the organization announced its 5 contributions to the Choosing Wisely Campaign. Initially started by the American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) Foundation, the Choosing Wisely Campaign was a response to the movement towards improved healthcare efficiency and a need to decrease unnecessary/low-value procedures and tests. Despite ACEP’s original reluctance to join, in February 2013 ACEP jumped on board and began creating their list of recommendations. After extensive review by an expert panel of emergency physicians and the ACEP Board of Directors, ACEP’s Choosing Wisely recommendations were released.1,2 They include:

1. Avoid Head CTs in ED patients with minor head injury who are at low risk based on validated decision rules.
2. Avoid placing indwelling urinary catheters in the ED for either urine output monitoring in stable patients who can void, or for patient or staff convenience.
3. Don’t delay engaging available palliative and hospice care services in the ED for patients likely to benefit.
4. Avoid antibiotics and wound cultures in ED patients with uncomplicated skin and soft tissue abscesses after successful incision and drainage and with adequate medical follow-up.
5. Avoid instituting IV fluids before doing a trial of oral rehydration therapy in uncomplicated ED cases of mild or moderate dehydration in children.

You be the judge.
Here is a list of pros and cons formulated based on literature review, articles and editorials from other emergency physicians (EPs).

Pros:
1. Reduce cost without affecting quality of care.1,2
2. Improve efficiency.1,2 Example: shorter LOS if imaging is involved
3. Encourages shared decision-making between patients and physicians.1,2,8
4. Medical benefits: Less ionizing radiation exposure, less risk of antibiotic-resistant organisms, fewer catheter-associated UTIs.1,2,4
5. EP-generated, EP-approved. EPs are identifying “low value” procedures/tests for their own speciality, rather than letting others define these for us.1,2,6 For example: the proposed, but ultimately rejected, CMS “use of Brain CT in the ED for atraumatic headache” measure was created by CMS without EP input.8

Cons:
1. Lack of advocacy for medical liability reform.1,2,5
2. EPs have no right of refusal to our patients.5
3. EPs often pick up the slack for other doctors.5
4. Will it come to a point where these 5 tests/procedures will be uncompensated?5
5. Loss of autonomy.6

Other lists of over-used and “low value” tests exist out there. Most notable is a list of 5 tests which was created by EPs and mid-level providers from six Partners Healthcare hospitals near Boston. Published in JAMA, this list was designed to be “actions a specialty provider”7 can take.6,7 They include:

1. Do not order CT of the C-spine for patients after trauma who do not meet NEXUS low risk criteria or the Canadian C-spine Rule.
2. Do not order CT to diagnose PE without first risk stratifying for PE (pretest probability and D-dimer tests if low probability). (included in ACR’s Choosing Wisely list)3,4
3. Do not order MRI of the L-spine for patients with lower back pain without high-risk features. (included in AAFP’s and ACP’s Choosing Wisely list)3,4
4. Do not order CT of the Head for patients with mild traumatic head injury who do not meet New Orleans criteria and Canadian CT Head Rule.
5. Do not order coagulation studies on patients without hemorrhage or suspected coagulopathy (eg: with anticoagulation therapy, clinical coagulopathy)

ACR = American College of Radiology, AAFP = American Academy of Family Physicians, ACP = American College of Physicians

Bedside actions: to begin incorporating these EP-approved recommendations into our daily practice in an effort to institute cost-effective quality medical care (ideally before private insurers, CMS, or other specialty societies begin mandating us to do the same)

References:
1. ACEP Announces List of Tests as Part of Choosing Wisely Campaign. ACEP Clinical & Practice Management. October 14, 2013. Downloaded from http://www.acep.org/Clinical—Practice-Management/ACEP-Announces-List-of-Tests-As-Part-of-Choosing-Wisely-Campaign/.
2. ACEP Prepares List for Choosing Wisely Campaign. ACEP Clinical & Practice Management. Downloaded from http://www.acep.org/Clinical—Practice-Management/ACEP-Announces-List-of-Tests-As-Part-of-Choosing-Wisely-Campaign/.
3. Choosing Wisely Master List. www.choosingwisely.org. Downloaded from http://www.choosingwisely.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/Choosing-Wisely-Master-List.pdf.
4. Mahesh, M. and Durand, D.J. The Choosing Wisely Campaign and its Potential Impact on Diagnostic Radiation Burden. J Am Coll Radiol. 2013; 10(1): 65-6.
5. Seaberg, David. Pro/Con: Why ACEP Should Not Join the ‘Choosing Wisely’ Campaign. Emergency Physicians Monthly. Published August 24, 2012. Downloaded from http://www.epmonthly.com/features/current-features/the-wiser-choice-should-acep-join-the-choosing-wisely-campaign-no/.
6. Schuur, J.D., Carney, D.P., Lyn, E.T., Raja, A.S., Michael, J.A., Ross, N.G., and Venkatesh, A.K. A Top-Five List of Emergency Medicine: A pilot project to improve the value of emergency care. JAMA Intern Med. 2014; 174(4): 509-515.
7. The Tale of Two Lists: Procedures to Avoid in the ED. Acute Care, Inc. Published February 25, 2014. Downloaded from http://www.acutecare.com/the-tale-of-two-lists-procedures-to-avoid-in-the-ed.
8. Venkatesh, A.K. and Schuur, J.D. A “Top Five” list for emergency medicine: a policy and research agenda for stewardship to improve the value of emergency care. American Journal of Emergency Medicine. 31 (2013) 1520-1524.

 

Post-Publication Peer Review

For those who have not been introduced to this concept, here is a blog post from Dr Radecki who writes the EM Lit of Note.

Because blog posts are not “peer-reviewed” before they are posted, the quality of a given post could be low. But depending on how many people read the post, the discussion can be lively and constructive.

This is in contrast to formal journal publication, where the peer review is PRE-publication, and discussion may be minimal. We will see a comment or two in an issue a month or two later, sometimes an official comment in the same issue. But the volume and even quality of responses possible with blogs, twitter, etc may surpass that of the official, slow process in the journals.

Scientific American had a nice article about this PPPR concept. As FOAMed and social media continues to expand in medicine, and in other fields, I think we will see more respect for this type of peer-review.

Routine Coags in Chest Pain

Thought this was a great little post regarding Coagulation studies in chest pain patients. Not sure how often its getting routinely obtained on our CP patients @ UofL but at Norton they get it on almost every chest pain patient that rolls through the door.
We’ve reduced the amount of coag studies we’re getting on our routine trauma patients, probably about time we make sure we’re doing the same in our low-risk chest pain patients.

What Emergency Physicians Can Do to Reduce Unnecessary Coagulation Testing in Patients with Chest Pain