Published in

The Journal of Applied Laboratory Medicine, 2021

DOI: 10.1093/jalm/jfab001

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Recurring Critical Results and Their Impact on the Volume of Critical Calls at a Tertiary Care Center

Distributing this paper is prohibited by the publisher
Distributing this paper is prohibited by the publisher

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Abstract

Abstract Background When a test result is critically abnormal, laboratories notify the responsible caregivers immediately, usually with a phone call. If the same test was ordered repeatedly, our institution has a policy of not notifying the caregiver if the previous result was also critical and within 24 h. We compared our policy with those of several different laboratories in North America and estimated the impact of changing our current policy to calling for all critical results, regardless of the time interval. Methods Several North American laboratories (n = 15) were surveyed regarding their critical result notification policy. For our institution, we performed a retrospective analysis focusing on critical values in a 5-month period for common chemistry tests. We estimated the effect on volume of calls and the impact on workload with regard to changing the critical result notification policy and critical thresholds. Results A majority of surveyed laboratories had some form of restriction for calling about recurring critical results. In our institution, removing the restrictions would increase the average number of daily calls by 11%–155%, depending on the analyte. The choice of critical thresholds also has an effect on the number of calls, and the effect depends on the analyte and the threshold chosen. Conclusions Guidelines do not specify how recurring critical results should be communicated. Depending on the institutional resources, some laboratories call only the first critical result for one or more tests if certain criteria are met. Modification of these policies can lead to significant changes in the volume of calls made by the laboratory and can have numerous impacts related to workload, logistics, and patient care.