Study: Doctors Ignoring e-Prescribing Warning Systems
via Daily Advantage from Pharmalive.com
"A new study said that doctors are more often overriding the automating warning systems of e-prescribing tools because they prefer to rely on their own judgment and find the alerts annoying. According to the study, clinicians overrode more than 90 percent of the drug interaction alerts and 77 percent of the drug allergy alerts. "The sheer volume of alerts generated by electronic prescribing systems stands to limit the safety benefits," said one of the study's authors."
The same problem occurs with PBM alerts generated at the pharmacy during claim submission. In addition to being slower than just writing the script on a prescription pad, this "steals" time from the physicians without improving quality. This adds one more reason why less than 20% of physicians use e-prescribing even occasionally.
Until the vendors figure out how to minimize this "white noise" and increase focus on pertinent alerts we will need other systems to help minimize drug therapy problems. Sophisticated alert identification and notification systems can combine medical and pharmacy claims to provide highly targeted, pertinent and actionable alerts to physicians, pharmacists and other care managers.
Friday, February 13, 2009
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