Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1083437 Journal of Clinical Epidemiology 2006 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

Background and ObjectiveTo provide researchers with an efficient yet methodologically robust method to design and analyze studies of the effectiveness of quality improvement interventions targeted at medical errors.MethodsAn interrupted time-series design was chosen. Error rates of a preintervention observational period are compared to those of an intervention period (interrupted by a brief transitional period not used in the analysis). Potential errors are flagged by computerized analysis. The positive predictive value of this automated method is established by targeted expert review of random samples of monthly admissions with flagged errors. The lengths of the preintervention and intervention observational periods and number of audits per month are determined via power and type I error analysis. The setting was a future study of electronic alert systems for errors related to nephrotoxic agents in a medium-sized hospital.ResultsBased on these methods, a study was deemed feasible to be conducted over a 38-month period, auditing 40 potential errors per month.ConclusionA logistic monthly error process model with independent variables (1) time in months (same slope pre vs. postintervention), and (2) a discrete jump postintervention to assess the effect size, offers a flexible, easy-to-interpret way to attack this problem.

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