Abstract

IntroductionUnnecessary “admission electrocardiograms (EKGs)” on admitted patients waiting (“boarding”) in the emergency department (ED) are often ordered. We introduced evidence-based EKG ordering guidelines and determined changes in the percent of patients with "preadmission" and "admission" EKGs ordered before vs. after guideline introduction and which patient characteristics predicted EKG ordering.MethodsIn 2016, our ED, cardiology, and hospitalist services implemented EKG ordering guidelines to reduce unnecessary ED EKGs ordered after disposition. We compared pre- vs. post-guideline EKG ordering to determine whether guidelines were associated with changes in "preadmission" or "admission EKG" ordering. Patients with an admission diagnosis unrelated to cardiac or pulmonary systems were included. An EKG was “admission” if the order time was after disposition time. The numerator was the number of "admission EKGs" ordered; the denominator was the total number of such admissions; those with "preadmission EKGs" were excluded from this analysis. Variables that might influence EKG ordering were explored. The chi-square test with Bonferroni adjustment was used to compare 2015 vs. 2016 percentages of patients with an “admission EKG.”ResultsThere was a decrease in unwarranted "admission EKGs" among ED boarding patients (44.1% pre-implementation to 27.5% by two years post-implementation) and an increase in unwarranted "preadmission EKGs" (66.1% pre-implementation to 72.8% post-implementation). Age ≥40 and past medical history independently predicted EKG ordering.DiscussionThe decrease in the ordering of "admission EKGs" but "preadmission EKGs" suggests the decline reflects a true change in ordering and not a general environmental/ecologic decline in ordering. This highlights the importance of careful guideline development and implementation.

Highlights

  • Unnecessary “admission electrocardiograms (EKGs)” on admitted patients waiting (“boarding”) in the emergency department (ED) are often ordered

  • There was a decrease in unwarranted "admission EKGs" among ED boarding patients (44.1% preimplementation to 27.5% by two years post-implementation) and an increase in unwarranted "preadmission EKGs" (66.1% pre-implementation to 72.8% post-implementation)

  • We investigated changes in preadmission EKG rates to determine whether any changes in admission EKG rates reflected a possible influence of ecologic changes in EKG ordering rather than the specific impact of this intervention to decrease unnecessary admission EKG ordering

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Summary

Introduction

Admitting services ask for an admission EKG in patients whose history and physical examination do not suggest a cardiac abnormality. We investigated the literature regarding baseline EKGs for hospitalized patients to determine whether there is a sub-population for whom admission EKGs should be performed in patients whose history and physical examination do not suggest a cardiac abnormality or whether the practice of admission EKGs should be abandoned. 1,410 patients admitted to a general medical service were studied. In 775 patients with no evidence of cardiac abnormality, 8 screening EKGs (1%) added information. Among patients whose history and physical examination did not suggest a cardiac abnormality, the EKG yield (added information) was 1% and cost-effectiveness (1985 dollars) was $24,000 per year of life saved ($53,760 in 2016 dollars). The EKG among older patients (≥ 45) was more helpful than in patients

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