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Journal ArticleDOI

A predictive instrument to improve coronary-care-unit admission practices in acute ischemic heart disease. A prospective multicenter clinical trial.

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TLDR
A predictive instrument for use in a hand-held programmable calculator, which requires only 20 seconds to compute a patient's probability of having acute cardiac ischemia, could reduce the number of CCU admissions in this country by more than 250,000 per year.
Abstract
Each year 1.5 million patients are admitted to coronary-care units (CCUs) for suspected acute ischemic heart disease; for half of these, the diagnosis is ultimately "ruled out." In this study, conducted in the emergency rooms of six New England hospitals ranging in type from urban teaching centers to rural nonteaching hospitals, we sought to develop a diagnostic aid to help emergency room physicians reduce the number of their CCU admissions of patients without acute cardiac ischemia. From data on 2801 patients, we developed a predictive instrument for use in a hand-held programmable calculator, which requires only 20 seconds to compute a patient's probability of having acute cardiac ischemia. In a prospective trial that included 2320 patients in the six hospitals, physicians' diagnostic specificity for acute ischemia increased when the probability value determined by the instrument was made available to them. Rates of false-positive diagnosis decreased without any increase in rates of false-negative diagnosis. Among study patients with a final diagnosis of "not acute ischemia," the number of CCU admissions decreased 30 per cent, without any increase in missed diagnoses of ischemia. The proportion of CCU admissions that represented patients without acute ischemia dropped from 44 to 33 per cent. Widespread use of this predictive instrument could reduce the number of CCU admissions in this country by more than 250,000 per year.

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Citations
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Effects of computerized clinical decision support systems on practitioner performance and patient outcomes: a systematic review.

TL;DR: Improvement in practitioner performance was associated with CDSSs that automatically prompted users compared with requiring users to activate the system and studies in which the authors were not the developers, as well as other factors.
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Changing Physician Performance: A Systematic Review of the Effect of Continuing Medical Education Strategies

TL;DR: Widely used CME delivery methods such as conferences have little direct impact on improving professional practice, and more effective methodssuch as systematic practice-based interventions and outreach visits are seldom used by CME providers.
References
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TL;DR: A survey drawn from social science research which deals with correlational, ex post facto, true experimental, and quasi-experimental designs and makes methodological recommendations is presented in this article.
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Estimation of the probability of an event as a function of several independent variables

TL;DR: A recursive approach based on Kalman's work in linear dynamic filtering and prediction is applied, derivable also from the work of Swerling (1959), which provides an example of many other possible uses of recursive techniques in nonlinear estimation and in related areas.
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A computer-derived protocol to aid in the diagnosis of emergency room patients with acute chest pain.

TL;DR: A decision protocol in the format of a simple flow chart to identify infarction on the basis of nine clinical factors, which preserved for detecting infarctions and significantly improved the specificity and positive predictive value of admission to an intensive-care area.
Journal ArticleDOI

The usefulness of a predictive instrument to reduce inappropriate admissions to the coronary care unit.

TL;DR: A mathematical instrument was developed to supplement the diagnostic information available to physicians in the emergency room to improve physicians' diagnostic accuracy in managing patients with acute ischemic heart disease and thereby reduce inappropriate coronary care unit admissions.
Journal ArticleDOI

End Results, Cost and Productivity of Coronary-Care Units

TL;DR: The use of coronary-care units for the treatment of patients with myocardial infarction has increased explosively with little attention to efficacy, need, or cost.
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