Notification of critical results: a College of American Pathologists Q-Probes study of 121 institutions

Hospital accreditors are placing increased emphasis on the timeliness with which critical laboratory results are reported to caregivers. To measure the speed of critical result notification at a group of laboratories, identify factors associated with faster reporting, and place findings in the conte...

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Published in:Archives of pathology & laboratory medicine (1976) Vol. 132; no. 12; pp. 1862 - 1867
Main Authors: Valenstein, Paul N, Wagar, Elizabeth A, Stankovic, Ana K, Walsh, Molly K, Schneider, Frank
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: United States College of American Pathologists 01-12-2008
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Abstract Hospital accreditors are placing increased emphasis on the timeliness with which critical laboratory results are reported to caregivers. To measure the speed of critical result notification at a group of laboratories, identify factors associated with faster reporting, and place findings in the context of the time required to transport and test specimens and to correct critical abnormalities. Contemporaneous review of 3545 inpatient and emergency department critical result notifications in 121 laboratories enrolled in the College of American Pathologists Q-Probes program. The median laboratory required a median of 5 minutes for staff to notify someone about a critical result once testing was complete. Laboratories affiliated with smaller institutions (P = .01), rural laboratories (P = .001), and sites that called results before releasing them from the laboratory computer (P = .02) were able to notify caregivers more quickly. There was variation among institutions in the time it took to notify caregivers (interquartile range, 1.5-8 minutes). At the median facility, notification took place 56.5 minutes after the specimen had been collected. The time required to notify caregivers of a critical laboratory result is a small proportion of the time taken to collect and test specimens or the time that has been reported for caregivers to correct abnormalities. Although failure to notify caregivers of critical results may represent an important patient safety vulnerability, the timeliness of laboratory notification is a minor contributor to total test turnaround time at most institutions.
AbstractList Context.—Hospital accreditors are placing increased emphasis on the timeliness with which critical laboratory results are reported to caregivers. Objective.—To measure the speed of critical result notification at a group of laboratories, identify factors associated with faster reporting, and place findings in the context of the time required to transport and test specimens and to correct critical abnormalities. Design.—Contemporaneous review of 3545 inpatient and emergency department critical result notifications in 121 laboratories enrolled in the College of American Pathologists Q-Probes program. Results.—The median laboratory required a median of 5 minutes for staff to notify someone about a critical result once testing was complete. Laboratories affiliated with smaller institutions (P = .01), rural laboratories (P = .001), and sites that called results before releasing them from the laboratory computer (P = .02) were able to notify caregivers more quickly. There was variation among institutions in the time it took to notify caregivers (interquartile range, 1.5–8 minutes). At the median facility, notification took place 56.5 minutes after the specimen had been collected. Conclusions.—The time required to notify caregivers of a critical laboratory result is a small proportion of the time taken to collect and test specimens or the time that has been reported for caregivers to correct abnormalities. Although failure to notify caregivers of critical results may represent an important patient safety vulnerability, the timeliness of laboratory notification is a minor contributor to total test turnaround time at most institutions.
Hospital accreditors are placing increased emphasis on the timeliness with which critical laboratory results are reported to caregivers. To measure the speed of critical result notification at a group of laboratories, identify factors associated with faster reporting, and place findings in the context of the time required to transport and test specimens and to correct critical abnormalities. Contemporaneous review of 3545 inpatient and emergency department critical result notifications in 121 laboratories enrolled in the College of American Pathologists Q-Probes program. The median laboratory required a median of 5 minutes for staff to notify someone about a critical result once testing was complete. Laboratories affiliated with smaller institutions (P = .01), rural laboratories (P = .001), and sites that called results before releasing them from the laboratory computer (P = .02) were able to notify caregivers more quickly. There was variation among institutions in the time it took to notify caregivers (interquartile range, 1.5-8 minutes). At the median facility, notification took place 56.5 minutes after the specimen had been collected. The time required to notify caregivers of a critical laboratory result is a small proportion of the time taken to collect and test specimens or the time that has been reported for caregivers to correct abnormalities. Although failure to notify caregivers of critical results may represent an important patient safety vulnerability, the timeliness of laboratory notification is a minor contributor to total test turnaround time at most institutions.
Hospital accreditors are placing increased emphasis on the timeliness with which critical laboratory results are reported to caregivers. To measure the speed of critical result notification at a group of laboratories, identify factors associated with faster reporting, and place findings in the context of the time required to transport and test specimens and to correct critical abnormalities. Contemporaneous review of 3545 inpatient and emergency department critical result notifications in 121 laboratories enrolled in the College of American Pathologists Q-Probes program. The median laboratory required a median of 5 minutes for staff to notify someone about a critical result once testing was complete. Laboratories affiliated with smaller institutions (P = .01), rural laboratories (P = .001), and sites that called results before releasing them from the laboratory computer (P = .02) were able to notify caregivers more quickly. There was variation among institutions in the time it took to notify caregivers (interquartile range, 1.5-8 minutes). At the median facility, notification took place 56.5 minutes after the specimen had been collected. The time required to notify caregivers of a critical laboratory result is a small proportion of the time taken to collect and test specimens or the time that has been reported for caregivers to correct abnormalities. Although failure to notify caregivers of critical results may represent an important patient safety vulnerability, the timeliness of laboratory notification is a minor contributor to total test turnaround time at most institutions.
Context.--Hospital accreditors are placing increased emphasis on the timeliness with which critical laboratory results are reported to caregivers. Objective.--To measure the speed of critical result notification at a group of laboratories, identify factors associated with faster reporting, and place findings in the context of the time required to transport and test specimens and to correct critical abnormalities. Design.--Contemporaneous review of 3545 inpatient and emergency department critical result notifications in 121 laboratories enrolled in the College of American Pathologists Q-Probes program. Results.--The median laboratory required a median of 5 minutes for staff to notify someone about a critical result once testing was complete. Laboratories affiliated with smaller institutions (P =.01), rural laboratories (P =.001), and sites that called results before releasing them from the laboratory computer (P =.02) were able to notify caregivers more quickly. There was variation among institutions in the time it took to notify caregivers (interquartile range, 1.5-8 minutes). At the median facility, notification took place 56.5 minutes after the specimen had been collected. Conclusions.--The time required to notify caregivers of critical laboratory result is a small proportion of the time taken to collect and test specimens or the time that has been reported for caregivers to correct abnormalities. Although failure to notify caregivers of critical results may represent an important patient safety vulnerability, the timeliness of laboratory notification is a minor contributor to total test turnaround time at most institutions.
Audience Professional
Academic
Author Wagar, Elizabeth A
Schneider, Frank
Valenstein, Paul N
Stankovic, Ana K
Walsh, Molly K
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  surname: Valenstein
  fullname: Valenstein, Paul N
  email: paul@valenstein.org
  organization: Department of Pathology, St Joseph Mercy Hospital, Ann Arbor, MI 48106-0995, USA. paul@valenstein.org
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  givenname: Elizabeth A
  surname: Wagar
  fullname: Wagar, Elizabeth A
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  givenname: Molly K
  surname: Walsh
  fullname: Walsh, Molly K
– sequence: 5
  givenname: Frank
  surname: Schneider
  fullname: Schneider, Frank
BackLink https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19061281$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed
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Snippet Hospital accreditors are placing increased emphasis on the timeliness with which critical laboratory results are reported to caregivers. To measure the speed...
Context.—Hospital accreditors are placing increased emphasis on the timeliness with which critical laboratory results are reported to caregivers. Objective.—To...
Context.--Hospital accreditors are placing increased emphasis on the timeliness with which critical laboratory results are reported to caregivers....
Hospital accreditors are placing increased emphasis on the timeliness with which critical laboratory results are reported to caregivers. To measure the speed...
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gale
crossref
pubmed
SourceType Aggregation Database
Index Database
StartPage 1862
SubjectTerms Benchmarking - standards
Caregivers
Communication
Data collection
Emergency medical care
Hematology
Hospital-Physician Relations
Humans
Laboratories
Laboratories, Hospital - standards
Licenses
Medical Records - standards
Medical Records - statistics & numerical data
Pathology Department, Hospital - standards
Patient safety
Quality Assurance, Health Care - standards
Quality Control
Time Factors
United States
Universities and colleges
Title Notification of critical results: a College of American Pathologists Q-Probes study of 121 institutions
URI https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19061281
https://www.proquest.com/docview/212042402
Volume 132
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