RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Electronic health record-based clinical decision support alert for severe sepsis: a randomised evaluation JF BMJ Quality & Safety JO BMJ Qual Saf FD BMJ Publishing Group Ltd SP 762 OP 768 DO 10.1136/bmjqs-2018-008765 VO 28 IS 9 A1 Norman Lance Downing A1 Joshua Rolnick A1 Sarah F Poole A1 Evan Hall A1 Alexander J Wessels A1 Paul Heidenreich A1 Lisa Shieh YR 2019 UL http://qualitysafety.bmj.com/content/28/9/762.abstract AB Background Sepsis remains the top cause of morbidity and mortality of hospitalised patients despite concerted efforts. Clinical decision support for sepsis has shown mixed results reflecting heterogeneous populations, methodologies and interventions.Objectives To determine whether the addition of a real-time electronic health record (EHR)-based clinical decision support alert improves adherence to treatment guidelines and clinical outcomes in hospitalised patients with suspected severe sepsis.Design Patient-level randomisation, single blinded.Setting Medical and surgical inpatient units of an academic, tertiary care medical centre.Patients 1123 adults over the age of 18 admitted to inpatient wards (intensive care units (ICU) excluded) at an academic teaching hospital between November 2014 and March 2015.Interventions Patients were randomised to either usual care or the addition of an EHR-generated alert in response to a set of modified severe sepsis criteria that included vital signs, laboratory values and physician orders.Measurements and main results There was no significant difference between the intervention and control groups in primary outcome of the percentage of patients with new antibiotic orders at 3 hours after the alert (35% vs 37%, p=0.53). There was no difference in secondary outcomes of in-hospital mortality at 30 days, length of stay greater than 72 hours, rate of transfer to ICU within 48 hours of alert, or proportion of patients receiving at least 30 mL/kg of intravenous fluids.Conclusions An EHR-based severe sepsis alert did not result in a statistically significant improvement in several sepsis treatment performance measures.