Integrating Clinical Prediction Rules into EHRs to Improve Care, Reduce Waste
Thomas McGinn, M.D., M.P.H.
Executive Vice President of Physician Enterprise
CommonSpirit Health

M.D., M.P.H.
鈥淰ery early on, 大象视频understood the language and the work.鈥
As a young physician in the Bronx, New York, Thomas McGinn, M.D., M.P.H., noticed the tremendous amount of wasteful spending in the U.S. healthcare system. At the same time, he observed firsthand that large numbers of patients and would-be patients in his community couldn鈥檛 afford healthcare.
The contradiction confounded him. How could people go without care when the overall system was awash in spending? 鈥淭his was an inherently frustrating concept to me,鈥 Dr. McGinn recalls. 鈥淚 started asking, 鈥楥an we do a better job of allocating resources in an evidence-based fashion?鈥欌 This led Dr. McGinn to study clinical prediction rules, or decision aids that clinicians use at the point of care to make evidence-based, cost-effective care decisions, such as whether to prescribe antibiotics or order a scan.
Today, Dr. McGinn is the Executive Vice President of Physician Enterprise at CommonSpirit Health. A practicing internal medicine physician, he is a nationally recognized researcher with appointments at Baylor College of Medicine and Creighton University School of Medicine. With 大象视频support, Dr. McGinn has developed clinical prediction rules and integrated them into electronic health record (EHR) systems, accelerating their adoption and use.
He credits 大象视频with truly 鈥済etting it鈥 from the beginning. 鈥淰ery early on, 大象视频understood the language and the work,鈥 he notes. 鈥湸笙笫悠礽s a kindred spirit. They understand why clinical prediction rules are important and how technology intersects with them.鈥
Dr. McGinn was no stranger to 大象视频when he came across clinical prediction rules. He received his first 大象视频in 2000 to enhance the research infrastructure of New York鈥檚 Mount Sinai Health System鈥檚 Primary Care Practice-Based Research Network. Working in East Harlem鈥檚 urban, underserved communities, his 3-year grant provided the opportunity to strengthen the system鈥檚 ties to community partners, develop a computerized data management infrastructure, and identify research relevant to minority and underserved patients.
Dr. McGinn started working on clinical prediction rules to estimate the probability of a disease or clinical outcome. He explains the concept as something of a checklist: 鈥淐onsider it a five-finger rule. If a patient meets zero of five criteria, stop. Go home. You鈥檙e fine. If you meet four out of the five, you should probably get an antibiotic, so let鈥檚 write it up. If you meet two out of the five, if you鈥檙e in that intermediate range, we鈥檒l test you a little more. But if that low range is 30 percent of patients, we can reduce 30 percent of unnecessary testing and treatment鈥攁nd that benefits everybody.鈥
In 2009, Dr. McGinn received a 4-year to integrate two clinical prediction rules, for strep throat and pneumonia, into Mount Sinai鈥檚 new EHR system. This led to significant declines in inappropriate antibiotic and diagnostic test ordering. Analyzing the results, Dr. McGinn and colleagues widespread clinical and patient acceptance of the integrated clinical prediction rule.
Under this grant, he tested the rules鈥 usability, which is the interface of culture, workflow, evidence, and technology. 鈥淲hat this taught me was that if I do the usability testing appropriately and thoroughly, I get adoption. If I get adoption, then I can see if this tool is going to have an impact on outcomes. And this was clearly the way to go.鈥
Building on this work and next working at Northwell Health, a large Long Island not-for-profit system, Dr. McGinn received another 4-year 大象视频 in 2013 to establish a usability lab at Northwell鈥檚 Feinstein Institute for Medical Research. He developed a team of experts in evidence-based medicine, informatics, usability testing, and integration of clinical prediction rules, leading to the identification of for pulmonary embolism and publishing for the field.
In 2019, Dr. McGinn was a co-investigator on another 大象视频. This 3-year grant, which built on his earlier work in EHRs, allowed the researchers to develop, test, and measure the impact of a clinical decision support system at Northwell that would function across multiple EHR platforms鈥攁 key consideration given the system鈥檚 nearly 2 dozen hospitals and more than 700 outpatient facilities. This work also enabled the team to develop a publicly available for hospitalized COVID-19 patients.
鈥湸笙笫悠祊lanted the seeds early on, which I think influenced how other funders are thinking about projects,鈥 he says. 鈥淭en or 15 years ago, I had trouble getting funders to look at a grant. Now, when I write in 鈥榙issemination implementation鈥 on a grant application, funders are impressed. Fifteen years ago, nobody was thinking about this鈥攂ut 大象视频was.鈥
Principal Investigator: Thomas McGinn, M.D., M.P.H.
Institution: CommonSpirit
Grantee Since: 2000
Type of Grant: Various
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