(Press-News.org) Why does one physician in a walk-in practice order laboratory monitoring tests for patients more often than a colleague working down the hallway? Which factors influence the use of these important tests that can help doctors ensure that high-risk drugs are prescribed safely? Clues to these questions lie in the age and general health of the patient, and whether the doctor is a specialist or not, says Shira Fischer of the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston. She is the lead author of a study¹ which appears in the Journal of General Internal Medicine², published by Springer.
Laboratory tests help doctors to monitor the condition of their patients, and to ensure that prescribed drugs work effectively and safely in treating high-risk conditions. However, these are not always performed, even in cases where such tests are advised before a new round of medicines can be dispensed. This can lead to medical errors and influence patient safety, as was highlighted in the US Institute of Medicine's report "To Err is Human." There are no US national guidelines about appropriate laboratory monitoring, and experts do not agree on the appropriate standards of monitoring.
To ascertain the factors that influence how and when physicians order laboratory tests, Fischer and her colleagues conducted research at the Meyers Primary Care Institute in Massachusetts, studying the electronic medical records of 31,417 patients and 278 providers in a large multispecialty New England group practice. The study includes information about prescriptions for 34 high-risk conditions and their 60 associated tests.
For recommended tests, the rate of physician ordering varies greatly, with for example almost all patients taking potassium receiving an order for a potassium level (95 percent) but less than half of patients on Lithium receiving orders for a blood count (42 percent) or creatinine level (49 percent), as is recommended. Tests measured yearly (for example, Digoxin level) were more likely to be ordered than those required more often (for example, AST/ALT levels in patients on Rifampin).
Specialists are more likely to order the recommended tests for the medications used in the study than primary care providers. Older patients, men and people already using other medications are also tested more regularly. Younger patients and people who do not often visit doctors seldom received test orders. Younger physicians and those who are familiar with the testing guidelines associated with a specific medication are also more likely to use laboratory tests to monitor their patients.
The researchers also found that the so-called "black box warnings"* on certain medications regularly alert practitioners to the need to run associated tests. These warnings can be required by the US Food and Drug Administration and are the strongest ones around in prescription drug labeling. Even so, not everyone takes heed of them.
"Interventions to improve laboratory monitoring should focus on areas with the greatest potential for improvement, such as providers who do not prescribe medication much, or those who prescribe medication to healthier and younger patients, or once-off walk-in patients," advises Fischer, who believes it is worthwhile to provide "black box warnings" on medications shown to be highest-risk to educate physicians about the importance of laboratory monitoring.
INFORMATION:
*Warnings, formatted with a 'box' or border around the text, that appear on the package insert for certain prescription drugs.
References:
1. Fischer, S.H. et al (2014). Factors Associated With Ordering Laboratory Monitoring of High-Risk Medications, Journal of General Internal Medicine. DOI 10.1007/s11606-014-2907-9
2. The Journal of General Internal Medicine is the official Journal of the Society of General Internal Medicine.
The full-text article is available to journalists on request.
Lab monitoring tests not always ordered per recommendations
Study urges improvement in physicians' inconsistent record of ordering lab tests
2014-06-26
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
First-grade teachers using ineffective instruction for math-challenged students
2014-06-26
WASHINGTON, D.C., June 26, 2014 - First-grade teachers in the United States may need to change their instructional practices if they are to raise the mathematics achievement of students with mathematics difficulties (MD), according to new research published online today in Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Educational Research Association.
VIDEO: Co-author Paul L. Morgan discusses key findings https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xCAzLGSZ6aM&feature=youtu.be
"Which Instructional Practices Most Help First-Grade Students with ...
Decoding characteristic food odors
2014-06-26
Complementing the five basic tastes of sweet, bitter, salty, sour and umami, a large variety of odors also contribute to the overall sensory impression of a foodstuff. In recent decades, approximately 10,000 volatile food compounds have been identified. Scientists from Technische Universität München (TUM) and the German Research Center for Food Chemistry (DFA) have carried out a meta-analysis on the odorant patterns of 227 food samples.
How cognac gets its complex notes
They were surprised to find that the almost unlimited variety of food smells is based on 230 key ...
Treating gum disease improves vascular health in Indigenous Australians: Study
2014-06-26
A simple non-surgical gum disease treatment markedly reduces the thickness of the wall of the arteries, a risk factor for heart disease, according to a first of its kind study among Aboriginal Australians.
The study findings may be of particular importance to Aboriginal Australians, who in general have poorer oral health and higher rates of cardiovascular disease.
Published in the latest issue of Hypertension, the study reports a significant decline in thickening of the wall of the carotid artery a year after a single session of gum treatment.
"The study shows that ...
Increased nearsightedness linked to higher education levels and more years spent in school
2014-06-26
German researchers have found strong evidence that attaining a higher level of education and spending more years in school are two factors associated with a greater prevalence and severity of nearsightedness, or myopia. Published online this month in Ophthalmology, the journal of the American Academy of Ophthalmology, the research is the first population-based study to demonstrate that environmental factors may outweigh genetics in the development of myopia.
While common, nearsightedness has become even more prevalent around the world in recent years and presents a growing ...
Victoria's volcano count rises
2014-06-26
Geologists have discovered three previously unrecorded volcanoes in volcanically active southeast Australia.
The new Monash University research, published in the Australian Journal of Earth Sciences, gives a detailed picture of an area of volcanic centres already known to geologists in the region.
Covering an area of 19,000 square kilometres in Victoria and South Australia, with over 400 volcanoes, the Newer Volcanics Province (NVP) features the youngest volcanoes in Australia including Mount Schank and Mount Gambier.
Focusing on the Hamilton region, lead researcher ...
Shaken, not stirred -- mythical god's capsules please!
2014-06-26
VIDEO:
Two oil drops, covered with particles of different properties, coalesce due to the action of an alternating electric field, forming a Janus capsule.
Click here for more information.
Everything depends on how you look at them. Looking from one side you will see one face; and when looking from the opposite side – you will see a different one. So appear Janus capsules, miniature, hollow structures, in different fragments composed of different micro- and nanoparticles. Theoreticians ...
A versatile joystick for animation artists
2014-06-26
Remember those molecule models made from sticks and balls you could assemble to study complex molecules back in school? Something similar has taken shape in the Interactive Geometry Lab at ETH Zurich. ETH-professor Olga Sorkine-Hornung and her team do not study molecules but ways to manipulate virtual shapes, like animated characters on a computer screen. Now they have developed an input device or "joystick" to move and pose virtual characters, made up – similar to the molecule models – of modular building blocks. An artist can assemble these blocks into an approximate ...
US rich get richer on stock market investments while modest investors are left behind
2014-06-26
In a new study, researchers from Imperial College Business School, Columbia University and the University of Maryland found that wealthy individuals in the US can get in relative terms up to 70 per cent times greater returns on their investments than those with modest wealth, when the yields on assets such as stocks and bonds are calculated. The team say that this further widens the income gap between rich and poor and potentially creates disparities in society.
Income inequality in the US has been steadily rising. According to a report by Oxfam International released ...
DFG and Leopoldina: Recommendations on 'scientific freedom and scientific responsibility'
2014-06-26
The Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) and the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina presented their joint recommendations on "Scientific Freedom and Scientific Responsibility" on 26 June 2014 in Berlin. Attended by representatives from the media, the Professors Jörg Hacker and Peter Strohschneider, Presidents of the Leopoldina and the DFG respectively, presented recommendations for handling security-relevant research, placing the subject against the background of the current political debate. With the publication the research organisations ...
Virus infection supports organ acceptance
2014-06-26
This news release is available in German. Over 150 million people throughout the world suffer from chronic infection with the hepatitis C virus (HCV), which causes massive damage to the liver. Advanced liver diseases often necessitate liver transplants. In the new clinical study Dr. Felix Bohne and his colleagues studied together with Prof. Alberto Sánchez-Fueyo from King's College London 34 hepatitis C patients at the Liver Unit of the University Hospital Clínic de Barcelona who had received new livers.
The researchers had two objectives here: first, they wanted ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
AERA selects 29 exemplary scholars as 2025 Fellows
Touchless tech: Control fabrics with a wave of your finger
JMIR aging invites submissions on the social and cultural drivers of health in aging adults
New research sheds light on why scleroderma affects mostly women and how to treat it
Lack of appropriate mental health care impacts quality of life for people with COPD
Yawn! Many people are bored by spiritual practice
A new algorithm sheds light on ‘disordered’ proteins
How’s the weather on Mars?
Plants struggled for millions of years after the world’s worst climate catastrophe
Clinical trial opens to study groundbreaking 3D printed device for babies with rare respiratory disease
Effects of shenfu decoction on neutrophil chemotactic function in septic mice
ESMT Berlin offers scholarships in executive leadership
New WSU study shows how scarcity pricing helps 'cult wineries' drive demand
New discovery and grant to accelerate Strep A vaccine efforts
Novel enzyme found in gut bacteria could revolutionize prebiotic research
Study reveals exposure to wildlife and forest walks helps ease symptoms of PTSD in US war veterans
Urban highways cut opportunities for social relationships, says study
Alzheimer’s treatment may lie in the brain’s own cleanup crew
Climate change threatens future of banana export industry
World’s oldest impact crater found, rewriting Earth’s ancient history
Pledge to phase out toxic lead ammunition in UK hunting by 2025 has failed
Possible foundations of human intelligence observed for the first time
Breast cancer death rates have stopped going down
Developing zero-waste, sustainable smart polymer materials
AI has ‘great potential’ for detecting wildfires, new study of the Amazon rainforest suggests
Magnetic catalysts enhance tumor treatment via electronic density regulation
Quantum dot discovery for LEDs brings brighter, more eco-friendly displays
Phosphorus doping stabilizes high-energy polymeric nitrogen at ambient pressure
Maternal cannabis use triples risk of disruptive behaviour in children
Balancing Nutrition: Micronutrient study could help prevent childhood obesity in Pacific region
[Press-News.org] Lab monitoring tests not always ordered per recommendationsStudy urges improvement in physicians' inconsistent record of ordering lab tests