Traumatic Brain Injury - Knowledge Translation
Status: | Completed |
---|---|
Conditions: | Hospital, Neurology |
Therapuetic Areas: | Neurology, Other |
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | Any |
Updated: | 4/13/2015 |
Start Date: | November 2011 |
End Date: | July 2013 |
Contact: | Peter S Dayan, MD, MSc |
Email: | psd6@columbia.edu |
Phone: | 212-342-4176 |
Implementation of the Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN) Traumatic Brain Injury Prediction Rules Using Computerized Clinical Decision Support: An Interrupted Time Series Trial
Blunt head trauma (BHT) accounts for >450,000 emergency department (ED) visits for children
annually in the US. Fortunately, >95% of head trauma in children is minor in nature.
Although most children have minor head trauma, clinicians obtain cranial CTs in 35-50% of
these children, which carries a radiation risk of malignancy. Recently, the investigators
conducted a study of 44,000 children in the Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research
Network (PECARN) in which the investigators developed and validated clinical prediction
rules that identify which children with minor BHT are at very low risk of having
clinically-important traumatic brain injuries (TBI) and, therefore, do not require a CT
scan. In this proposal, the investigators aim to assess whether implementing the PECARN TBI
prediction rules (one for preverbal, one for verbal children) via computerized clinical
decision support (CDS) decreases the number of (unnecessary) cranial CT scans obtained by ED
physicians for children with minor BHT at very low risk of clinically-important TBIs. After
a two-site pilot phase to test and refine the CDS, the investigators will conduct a
seven-center prospective trial. The investigators will measure cranial CT use prior to and
after the intervention implementation of CDS and clinician education. The investigators will
study the use of CT by practitioners for children <18 years for 12 months pre- and
post-intervention.
annually in the US. Fortunately, >95% of head trauma in children is minor in nature.
Although most children have minor head trauma, clinicians obtain cranial CTs in 35-50% of
these children, which carries a radiation risk of malignancy. Recently, the investigators
conducted a study of 44,000 children in the Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research
Network (PECARN) in which the investigators developed and validated clinical prediction
rules that identify which children with minor BHT are at very low risk of having
clinically-important traumatic brain injuries (TBI) and, therefore, do not require a CT
scan. In this proposal, the investigators aim to assess whether implementing the PECARN TBI
prediction rules (one for preverbal, one for verbal children) via computerized clinical
decision support (CDS) decreases the number of (unnecessary) cranial CT scans obtained by ED
physicians for children with minor BHT at very low risk of clinically-important TBIs. After
a two-site pilot phase to test and refine the CDS, the investigators will conduct a
seven-center prospective trial. The investigators will measure cranial CT use prior to and
after the intervention implementation of CDS and clinician education. The investigators will
study the use of CT by practitioners for children <18 years for 12 months pre- and
post-intervention.
Clinicians:
Our target study population includes clinicians with training in pediatrics (particularly
pediatric emergency medicine)or general emergency medicine. As clinical practice is likely
to vary among physicians with different training and in different settings, we will
include two types of sites for this trial:
1. Pediatric emergency departments with >80% of children cared for by pediatric
emergency medicine physicians or general pediatricians.
2. General emergency departments with >80% of children cared for by general emergency
medicine physicians.
Patients:
Inclusion:
- children younger than 18 years who
- sustained minor blunt blunt head trauma defined by Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) scores of
14 or 15 on initial ED evaluation
Exclusion:
Patients who have any of the following:
- blunt head trauma > 24 hours prior
- penetrating trauma
- brain tumors
- coagulopathy
- ventriculoperitoneal shunts
- preexisting neurological disorders complicating assessment
- neuroimaging obtained at an outside hospital before transfer to a study site
We found this trial at
1
site
Columbia University Medical Center Situated on a 20-acre campus in Northern Manhattan and accounting for...
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