Increased Adherence to Prenatal Group B Streptococcal Screening Guidelines Through a Paired Electronic Reminder and Education Intervention |
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Authors: | Kathy L. MacLaughlin Gregory M. Garrison Marc R. Matthews Marcia L. O’Brien Elizabeth Westby Paul V. Targonski |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Family Medicine, Mayo Clinic, 200 First St SW, Rochester, MN, 55905, USA 2. Division of Primary Care Internal Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA
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Abstract: | The 2010 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) update on perinatal group B streptococcal (GBS) prevention advises universal vaginal–rectal GBS screening of pregnant women in the 35th through 37th week of gestation. Because GBS colonization is transient, a test performed more than 5 weeks before delivery may not have sufficient negative predictive value to be clinically useful. Our objective was to increase rates of quality-improved, CDC-adherent GBS screening and decrease repeat screening. A reminder for maternal vaginal–rectal GBS testing was added to the physicians’ electronic ordering screen, and family medicine physicians and residents were educated about screening guidelines through standardized, in-person presentations. Retrospective chart review was performed before and after these interventions. Univariate or bivariate analysis was performed for demographic factors, timing of first screen, rates of CDC-adherent screening (the newly defined quality-improved screen and the usual screen), and rates of repeat and unnecessary screens. Multivariate analysis was performed with quality-improved and usual screening as dependent variables. Bivariate analysis showed that post-intervention rates of quality-improved screening increased from 30 to 62 % (P < .001), usual screening increased from 69 to 84 % (P = .005), and repeat GBS screening decreased from 20 to 8 % (P = .007). Multivariate analysis showed increased post-intervention odds of quality-improved screening [odds ratio (OR) 3.59; 95 % CI 2.07–6.34] and usual screening (OR 2.67; 95 % CI 1.40–5.25). Low-cost, reproducible quality improvement interventions (electronic order reminder, educational sessions) have the potential to increase guideline adherence for GBS screening in pregnant women and decrease repeat screening. |
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