Appl Clin Inform
DOI: 10.1055/a-2605-4510
Case Report

Special Issue on CDS Failures: Right Idea, Wrong time: Focusing on alert timing for effective decision support

Averi Wilson
1   Pediatrics, The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, United States (Ringgold ID: RIN12334)
,
Andrew Patrick Bain
2   Surgery, UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, United States (Ringgold ID: RIN12334)
,
Janet Webb
1   Pediatrics, The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, United States (Ringgold ID: RIN12334)
,
Christoph Ulrich Lehmann
3   Clinical Informatics Center, UT Southwestern Medical, Dallas, United States (Ringgold ID: RIN89063)
,
Brett Moran
4   Clinical Informatics, Parkland Health and Hospital System, Dallas, United States (Ringgold ID: RIN21114)
,
Nainesh Shah
5   Internal Medicine, UT Southwestern, Dallas, United States (Ringgold ID: RIN12334)
,
Ellen O'Connell
6   Emergency Medicine, UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, United States (Ringgold ID: RIN12334)
› Author Affiliations

1.1. Background: Effective CDS interventions improve adherence to care guidelines, reduce prescribing errors, and, in some settings, decrease patient mortality. However, misalignment with the "Five Rights" framework, particularly regarding CDS timing in clinical workflows, can lead to implementation failures, alert fatigue, and physician burnout. 1.2. Objectives: This case series aimed to evaluate and redesign three interruptive CDS alerts at a large safety-net health system to better align with clinician workflows, reduce interruptions, and improve compliance with care guidelines. 1.3. Methods: We analyzed three interruptive alerts using data from Epic’s SlicerDicer tool, focusing on alert frequency, contributors to alert triggering, and user responses before and after intervention. Alerts were modified to improve their timing and relevance within the workflow. 1.4. Results: Modifications included retiming an HIV screening alert to trigger during laboratory test orders, reducing alert firings by 87% while increasing monthly screening orders from 3,561 to 4,547 (p<0.001). An administrative alert's firing frequency decreased by 86% through the introduction of a four-hour lockout period, maintaining compliance rates. Finally, restricting a pediatric head circumference discrepancy alert to in-person visits only eliminated interruptions during telehealth encounters, addressing a major source of clinician frustration. 1.5. Conclusions: Aligning CDS tools with clinical workflows through adherence to the "Five Rights" framework reduces interruptions and improves outcomes. Iterative review, user feedback, and proactive redesign are essential to ensure CDS effectiveness, particularly as healthcare evolves to include novel care delivery models like telehealth.



Publication History

Received: 13 January 2025

Accepted after revision: 09 May 2025

Accepted Manuscript online:
13 May 2025

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