Abstract

Introduction Optimization of alerts in the electronic health records (EHR) has shown to be effective at improving efficacy and realizing some of the potential of EHRs. This project presents an overall alert strategy to improve efficacy: removing alerts that failed to achieve their clinical goals, curating those which were being overridden frequently, and adhering to a strict discipline of alert performance and taxonomy. The goal was to increase the desired behaviors the alerts were designed to achieve as reflected in increased alert acceptance. Methods An alert reduction strategy was deployed …

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