Impact of a metabolic screening bundle on rates of screening for metabolic syndrome in a psychiatry resident outpatient clinic.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
Although it is widely acknowledged that second-generation antipsychotics are associated with cardiometabolic side effects,
rates of metabolic screening have remained low. The authors created a quality-improvement (QI) intervention in an academic
medical center outpatient psychiatry resident clinic with the aim of improving rates of screening for metabolic syndrome in
patients being prescribed antipsychotic medications.
METHODS
The core components of the QI intervention included resident education and creation of a metabolic screening bundle for the
electronic medical record. Quarterly audits of individual patient electronic medical records assessed whether a patient was
currently prescribed antipsychotics and whether metabolic-syndrome screening had been documented at any time in the preceding
12 months.
RESULTS
In each audit period, from 131 to 156 patients (30%-36% of total clinic sample) were prescribed antipsychotic medication.
After the intervention, rates of documentation of the components of the metabolic screening bundle increased between 3.5-
and 10-fold (final rates: 39% for blood pressure, 44% for BMI, and 55% for glucose and lipid panel). Rates of documenting
the full bundle increased nearly 30-fold (final rate: 31%).
CONCLUSION
Provider-education combined with introduction of a documentation bundle in the electronic medical record increased rates of
documented metabolic screening in patients being prescribed antipsychotic medications by psychiatry residents.
Links
Authors
Wiechers IR, Viron M, Stoklosa J, Freudenreich O, Henderson DC, Weiss A
Institution
Dept. of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, USA. ilse.wiechers@yale.edu
Source
Academic psychiatry : the journal of the American Association of Directors of Psychiatric Residency Training and the Association for Academic Psychiatry 36:2 2012 Mar 1 pg 118-21MeSH
Academic Medical CentersAdult
Ambulatory Care Facilities
Antipsychotic Agents
Female
Humans
Internship and Residency
Male
Metabolic Syndrome X
Outpatients
Physician's Practice Patterns
Psychiatry
Quality Assurance, Health Care
Quality Improvement
Pub Type(s)
Journal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Language
eng
PubMed ID
22532201
Log In

