Title of article :
A review on laboratory tests’ utilization: A trigger for cutting costs and quality improvement in health care settings
Author/Authors :
Meidani, Zahra Health Information Management Research Center - Department of Health Information Management & Technology - School of Allied Health - Kashan University of Medical Sciences, Kashan, Iran , Farzandipour, Mehrdad Health Information Management Research Center - Department of Health Information Management & Technology - School of Allied Health Professions - Kashan University of Medical Sciences, Kashan, Iran , Farrokhian, Alireza Department of Cardiology - School of Medicine - Kashan University of Medical Sciences, Kashan, Iran , Haghighat, Masomeh Health Information Management Research Center - Department of Health Information Management & Technology - School of Allied Health Professions - Kashan University of Medical Sciences, Kashan, Iran
Abstract :
Background: Considering the role of laboratory tests as a central part of controlling health expenditure, this
study intends to investigate laboratory tests overutilization in Iran to pave the way for future interventions.
Methods: Inappropriate laboratory utilization was reviewed in a cross-sectional survey through the retrospective
analysis of 384 medical records at a tertiary center. To pave the way for future intervention, overutilization
tests were classified into two categories, inappropriate and inefficient, and then they were analyzed. Frequency
analysis was used to analysis patient’s age, gender, hospital wards, length of stay, and diagnosis as well as inappropriate
test and inefficient tests.
Results: A total of 143 (1.50 %) of the tests were inefficient and was ordered due to laboratory errors including
hemolysis, inefficient sampling, or absurd results. 2522 (26.40%) of the tests were inappropriate and stem from
failure to meet medical/clinical appropriateness criteria.
Conclusion: Whereas, inappropriate test ordering was more frequent than inefficient tests, the initial improvement
strategy should focus on physicians’ test ordering behavior through conducting proper teaching strategies,
ongoing audit and educational feedback, implementing health information technology tools and employing laboratory
practice guidelines (LPGs) and testing algorithms. Conducting continuous quality improvement cycle
for laboratory services and training of personnel involved in blood sampling is recommended for inefficient
tests.
Keywords :
Algorithms , Quality Improvement , Hemolysis , Utilization review , Laboratories , Health Expenditures
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics