Minimal Impact of
Implemented Early Warning Score and Best Practice Alert for Patient
Deterioration*
by Bedoya, Armando D.;
Clement, Meredith E.; Phelan, Matthew; Steorts, Rebecca C.; O’Brien, Cara;
Goldstein, Benjamin A.
Objectives:
Previous studies have looked at National Early Warning Score performance in
predicting in-hospital deterioration and death, but data are lacking with
respect to patient outcomes following implementation of National Early Warning
Score. We sought to determine the effectiveness of National Early Warning Score
implementation on predicting and preventing patient deterioration in a clinical
setting.
Design:
Retrospective cohort study. Setting: Tertiary care academic facility and a
community hospital. Patients: Patients 18 years old or older hospitalized from
March 1, 2014, to February 28, 2015, during preimplementation of National Early
Warning Score to August 1, 2015, to July 31, 2016, after National Early Warning
Score was implemented. Interventions: Implementation of National Early Warning
Score within the electronic health record and associated best practice alert.
Measurements and Main Results: In this study of 85,322 patients (42,402 patients
pre-National Early Warning Score and 42,920 patients post-National Early
Warning Score implementation), the primary outcome of rate of ICU transfer or
death did not change after National Early Warning Score implementation, with
adjusted hazard ratio of 0.94 (0.84–1.05) and 0.90 (0.77–1.05) at our academic
and community hospital, respectively. In total, 175,357 best practice
advisories fired during the study period, with the best practice advisory
performing better at the community hospital than the academic at predicting an
event within 12 hours 7.4% versus 2.2% of the time, respectively. Retraining
National Early Warning Score with newly generated hospital-specific
coefficients improved model performance.
Conclusions: At
both our academic and community hospital, National Early Warning Score had poor
performance characteristics and was generally ignored by frontline nursing
staff. As a result, National Early Warning Score implementation had no
appreciable impact on defined clinical outcomes. Refitting of the model using
site-specific data improved performance and supports validating predictive
models on local data.
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