Publication | Closed Access
Identifying Severe Sepsis via Electronic Surveillance
28
Citations
14
References
2014
Year
Severe SepsisDiagnosisPatient Tracking SystemDisease DetectionDigital HealthElectronic SurveillanceSepsisSepsis PhenotypingSevere Sepsis OnsetPublic HealthSyndromic SurveillanceAcute CareDisease SurveillanceEpidemiologySevere Sepsis PatientsPatient SafetyMedicineClinical Decision Support SystemHealth InformaticsEmergency MedicineDisease Monitoring
An electronic sepsis surveillance system (ESSV) was developed to identify severe sepsis and determine its time of onset. ESSV sensitivity and specificity were evaluated during an 11-day prospective pilot and a 30-day retrospective trial. ESSV diagnostic alerts were compared with care team diagnoses and with administrative records, using expert adjudication as the standard for comparison. ESSV was 100% sensitive for detecting severe sepsis but only 62.0% specific. During the pilot, the software identified 477 patients, compared with 18 by adjudication. In the 30-day trial, adjudication identified 164 severe sepsis patients, whereas ESSV detected 996. ESSV was more sensitive but less specific than care team or administrative data. ESSV-identified time of severe sepsis onset was a median of 0.00 hours later than adjudication (interquartile range = 0.05). The system can be a useful tool when implemented appropriately but lacks specificity, largely because of its reliance on discreet data fields.
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