Remote symptom monitoring alerts for nurses: Removing the noise.

Authors

null

Megan Brooke Patterson

University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL

Megan Brooke Patterson, Nicole E. Caston, D'Ambra Dent, Stacey A. Ingram, Keyonsis Hildreth, Andres Azuero, Jennifer Young Pierce, Chelsea McGowen, Chao-Hui Sylvia Huang, James Nicholas Odom, Bryan J. Weiner, Bradford E. Jackson, Angela M. Stover, Doris Howell, Ethan Basch, Gabrielle Betty Rocque

Organizations

University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, Strayer University, Washington, DC, University of South Alabama, Mobile, AL, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, Toronto, ON, Canada, O'Neal Comprehensive Cancer Center at The University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL

Research Funding

No funding received
None.

Background: Within remote symptom monitoring (RSM) programs, nurses may respond to many symptom alerts in a given day. The shift to standard-of-care delivery necessitates adding this responsibility to an already strained nursing workforce. Thus, selecting the right symptoms to alert is critical and requires care to minimize non-actionable alerts. Little is known about strategies to reduce alert burden on nursing. Methods: In this quality improvement initiative, we aimed to improve the nurse’s perception of alert utility and minimize “noise” or alerts that were not actionable. A continuous quality improvement approach, with multiple Plan Do Study Act (PDSA) cycles, was conducted based on nursing feedback. Modifications were captured, described, and categorized. Alert details prior to and after changes are described. Descriptive statistics were calculated using frequencies and percentages for categorical variables. Results: In PDSA cycle 1, we allowed nurses to set an expected level for specific symptoms to “snooze” alerts for up to 1 month in June 2021. Snoozed alerts did not trigger to nurses. Overall, 5.8% (405/7029) of symptom alerts were snoozed from late June 2021-May 2023 (Alert Redundancy Change). In PDSA cycle 2, an option “I don’t want a call back” was added for patients in late January 2022; 42.8% (2394/5595) of subsequent symptom alert surveys requested no call back from the nurse (Survey Response Threshold Change). In PDSA cycle 3, nurses reported that “insomnia” was not actionable weekly. This was encountered in 7.2% (170/2368) of surveys prior to removal at the end of June 2022. “Insomnia” was replaced with “rash”, which generated alerts in 6.5% (295/4549) of surveys (Survey Content Change). In PDSA cycle 4, nurses identified that hospitalized patients generated alerts that were not appropriate for outpatient action. The system was modified to add a banner bar highlighting to the nurse that the patient was hospitalized and alert could be closed with a response of “patient hospitalized” late February 2023. Following implementation, a total of 9.1% (35/384) enrolled patients either self-selected or a navigator marked them as hospitalized and therefore their surveys were paused and/or the nurse was able to close the alert selecting “patient hospitalized”. (Survey Location Change). With these changes, there were 9.9% (97/975) surveys in May 2023 with at least one actionable alert. Conclusions: Modifications to alert systems can reduce the number of non-actionable alerts that nursing must address in real-world settings, thus minimizing burden on staff.

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Abstract Details

Meeting

2023 ASCO Quality Care Symposium

Session Type

Poster Session

Session Title

Poster Session A

Track

Quality, Safety, and Implementation Science,Cost, Value, and Policy,Patient Experience,Survivorship

Sub Track

Application of Quality Improvement Tools

Citation

JCO Oncol Pract 19, 2023 (suppl 11; abstr 379)

DOI

10.1200/OP.2023.19.11_suppl.379

Abstract #

379

Poster Bd #

G7

Abstract Disclosures

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