Hi fellow CMIOs, CNIOs, and other Clinical #Informatics and #HealthIT friends,
Today I thought I'd share some helpful slides from a discussion that very few people write about - Developing and approving order sets.
This is a topic where far too little has been shared openly, so many organizations struggle unnecessarily until they learn through repeated trial-and-error how to do this in a much more smooth, efficient way.
Unfortunately, it also brings up the question about maintenance of order sets :
- Yes, order sets can help save time, reduce clicks, and reduce unexpected pages from staff, but...
- They can also take a lot of work to develop, approve, monitor, and maintain.
So our agenda for today includes :
First, what exactly do we mean by 'Order Sets'?
Order sets are sometimes referred to as 'Ordering Tools', since different vendors use different terminology to describe these collections of orders that are used to standardize and expedite the ordering process for a common, well-described clinical scenario.
Because they look so similar (and even share some of their definitions!), Order sets are sometimes confused for order panels, pick-lists, and clinical pathways:
- Order Set (n.) - A collection of orders used to standardize the ordering process for a common, well-described clinical scenario (e.g. workup, treatment, admission, discharge, prep, postop, protocols, etc for pediatric and adult/geriatric patients.)
- Order Panel (n.) - A collection of common orders of a specific type, typically designed for inclusion in order sets (e.g. common pain meds, common GI meds, common labs, common nursing orders)
- Pick-List (aka 'Quick Preference List' or 'Convenience Panels') (n.) - A collection of common orders of a specific type, typically designed for convenience only, that is not related to a specific, well-described clinical scenario (e.g. common pain meds, common IV fluids, common anti-emetics, common lab orders, common radiology orders, etc.)
- Clinical Pathway (n.) - A collection of order sets used to standardize and expedite the daily ordering process (typically throughout the course of a planned hospitalization) for a defined clinical condition, procedure, or surgery.
Order sets also typically come in two types :
- Oncology Order Sets - Typically broken out in a separate category, because of the unique, complex ordering needs for chemotherapy and biologic infusions (e.g. monoclonal antibodies)
- All other Order Sets (General order sets) - Typically related to working up common chief complaints, treating common conditions/diseases, admitting/transferring/discharging to/from an inpatient area, preparing for a surgery/procedure, recovering from a surgery/procedure, and special protocols (to automate common, high-risk clinical scenarios where the benefits of standardization and timely delivery of care outweigh any known risks).
For this purposes of this post, we will mostly be discussing the second category above - General order sets. (We could write a whole separate post about the unique needs of Oncology and biologic infusion ordering workflows.)
So before we get to our development discussion, let's first start with our approval discussion - In a typical healthcare organization, who is best-suited to approve an order set?
Many organizations struggle with this question, because there's usually no one person who has all of the time, expertise, and authority needed to approve an order set. I sometimes describe this as the 'Captain Kirk and Scotty' paradox :
- Captain Kirk = Has all the authority, but little expertise
- Scotty and engineers = Have all the expertise, but little authority
So ultimately, the lesson here is : Captain Kirk, Scotty, and the other engineers have to work together to make the ship run.
Some organizations chose to focus on expediency, by assigning one person or one team - sometimes a clinical officer (CMO, CNO, or both?) or an appointed committee (chaired by a CMO, CNO, CMIO, and/or CNIO?) - But is that enough? Are there any helpful regulations or published best practices, and if so, what do they say?
Unfortunately, there's not much. As of 2024, order sets are still a bit of a mystery to most regulatory agencies. Not only does CMS use the terms "Standing Orders", "Order Sets", and "Protocols" interchangeably, but there are very few published best practices openly available on the Internet. The OHSU ClinfoWiki has some helpful information about oversight and governance in these published pieces :
- "Creating Order Sets"
- "Making Sense of Clinical Practice: Order Set Design Strategies in CPOE"
- "Enhancing Physician Adoption of CPOE: The Search for a Perfect Order Set"
So the most concrete regulatory guidance seems to come from the Centers for Medicaid Services (CMS) 42 CFR § 482.24, under section (3) which states :
So if CMS expects the Medical Staff and the hospital's Nursing and Pharmacy leadership to be 'reviewing' order sets - Does that mean three committees need to be involved in the review/approval process? (E.g. Medical Board/Medical Executive Committee, Nursing Council, and Pharmacy and Therapeutics?) Or should those committees delegate a separate team to just focus on order sets?
Or should the clinical leadership of those areas (e.g. CMO, CNO, and VP of Pharmacy) approve the order sets? Even if they have the time and expertise to approve order sets, do they have the time to develop them? And if they don't have the time and bandwidth to 'get into the weeds' to develop them, how can they feel confident about approving them?
And what about the other supporting departments in a clinical enterprise - Laboratory, Radiology, and other ancillary services? When the OHSU ClinfoWiki article on "Creating Order Sets" says, "They have their needs thoroughly examined by their practice management oversight group, nursing, support staff and anyone who might be affected by the order set," who exactly might be affected by the order set? After all, don't doctors just write orders, and other people in the organization have to execute/follow-through with them?
Well, it's not that simple. Clinical staff affected by the order set include both :
- The staff writing/creating orders (typically Ordering Providers, including Attendings, Residents/Fellows, Advanced Practice Providers/APRNs/PAs/CRNAs etc.)
- The staff following/executing orders (commonly everyone else in a clinical enterprise, including Nursing, Pharmacy, Lab, Radiology, Bed Management, Case Management, Dietary/Nutrition, and other ancillary support services)
Some doctors initially bristle when they learn that other specialties are involved in reviewing and approving their order sets. But if we take a step back - Order sets create patterns of clinical care and utilization that have an impact across the whole organization, so it shouldn't be a surprise that other people are involved in reviewing the best practices, and planning utilization and resource needs to execute and follow-through with those orders.
So how do we make sense of this? It helps to imagine a 'pyramid' of delegation and oversight, one that helps to connect Captain Kirk (all authority, little expertise) with Scotty and his engineers (all expertise, little authority) :
... which is a very basic operational unit that can be employed in developing a process for reviewing and approving order sets. So in a typical clinical enterprise, there are similar pyramids for the major clinical disciplines involved in the delivery of care (Nursing, Pharmacy, and Physicians):
Note there are also similar pyramids for Lab, Radiology, and other Ancillary Services (such as Physical Therapy, Occupational Therapy, Dietary/Nutrition, Case Management, Social Work, etc.) :
So now, let's see if we can answer the question : Who exactly is affected by an order set? Well it depends largely on the complexity of your order set. Small, short order sets typically have fewer stakeholders, and larger, complex order sets typically have more.
Exactly who needs to participate in the discussion will depend on the type(s) of orders in your order set. You can create a very helpful order set development template by identifying and aggregating your most common order types. Most healthcare organizations can divide up all patient care orders into one of sixteen (16) groups :
Since each order type has a unique function, usually executed/performed by a unique stakeholder - You can then take these sixteen (16) order types, import them into a spreadsheet, and next identify the common stakeholders for each order type :
Once you've identified the common stakeholders for each order type, you can then create a standardized order set template, that not only helps define expected standards for each order type (e.g. medication orders with medication doses, routes, frequencies, etc.), but also the stakeholders necessary to participate in the review and approval of the order set :
Once you have this template, you can first try it out with a simple order set, say, with just a Procedure order, some Activity and Nursing orders, some Diet orders, and some IV fluid orders :
Or, you can try it with a more complex order set, one that includes : ADT orders, Code Status orders, Procedure orders, Activity orders, Blood Bank orders, Nursing orders, Diet orders, IV Fluid orders, Medication orders, Laboratory orders, Diagnostic Radiology orders, Consult/Referral orders, and Discharge Education orders -
This is helpful when trying to plan new order sets, so you can identify who to invite to your build discussions.
Now, since I'm discussing order sets, I thought it would be helpful to mention the surprising importance of solid, well-planned naming conventions.
Early in my Informatics career, I would have never have guessed the importance of naming conventions. A few people warned me, but at first I was skeptical. I actually once said something like this : "What does it matter, what you call it? As long as they can find it!"
What I didn't know at the time (and learned with experience) is that naming conventions :
- Determine the size of your order set library - More coarse/vague naming conventions result in fewer order sets, and more specific/granular naming conventions result in more order sets.
- Determine how easy it will be for your users to find (and bookmark) the order set.
- Help determine whether you are clearly building a time-saving order set - Or if you are confusing it for a Pick-List, Order Panel, or Clinical Pathway.
- Strongly influence the number of clicks and unexpected pages your users will experience - The more clear and specific the naming convention is, the more you can pre-configure and pre-click default settings (so your users don't have to!)
So with that - First, some helpful take-home reminders :
... and a few more to consider as you create and develop your governance and order set development, review, and approval processes with your Clinical, Legal, Compliance/Regulatory, Finance, and other leadership :