Penn Medicine Recognized for App That Reduces Mechanical Ventilation Time

May 2, 2019
‘Awakening and Breathing Coordination’ app uses EHR data to allow faster weaning of patients from sedation and mechanical ventilator support

Philadelphia-based Penn Medicine has won ECRI Institute’s 2019 Health Devices Achievement Award for developing an app that enables patients to wean off ventilators faster.

The nonprofit ECRI Institute’s annual award recognizes a member healthcare facility’s initiative to improve patient safety, reduce costs or otherwise facilitate better strategic management of health technology.

Penn Medicine’s innovation reduced patients’ mechanical ventilation time by more than 24 hours, compared to baseline data. It also shortened the time they spent in the intensive care unit and hospital.

“This submission impressed us because Penn Medicine harnessed EHR data in real-time to improve patient outcomes,” said David Jamison, executive director of selection and evaluation at ECRI Institute, in a prepared statement. “Innovations that improve patient safety get at the heart of ECRI Institute’s mission.”

Penn Medicine’s app, called ABC for Awakening and Breathing Coordination, includes a computerized dashboard and clinician alert system that uses EHR data to allow faster weaning of patients from sedation and mechanical ventilator support. By relying on current EHR data, the system provides clinicians with relevant, actionable information.

“The ABC app helped us address one of the biggest challenges in healthcare today —translating important evidenced-based practices to the bedside,” says Barry Fuchs, M.D., clinical lead on the project at Penn Medicine, in a statement.

The development and implementation required coordination by clinicians, clinical decision support, IT, data science, the Center for Health Care Innovation, and PENN E-lert telehealth.

 “The secret sauce to driving patient outcome value in the Penn Medicine healthcare setting is the collaboration and teamwork that exists across many different disciplines, said Mike Restuccia, senior vice president and chief information officer at Penn Medicine, in a statement.

ECRI Institute also recognizes three finalists for the 2019 Health Devices Achievement Award:

• John Muir Health (Walnut Creek, CA) for creating a database that formalizes and simplifies the alternative equipment maintenance decision process;

• Parkview Health (Fort Wayne, IN) for automating the inventory management process for perioperative supplies; and

• U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) New England Healthcare System (Bedford, MA) for establishing methodology to identify equipment that qualifies for alternative equipment maintenance status.

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