BMJ Health & Care Informatics (Apr 2025)

Digital innovation in healthcare: quantifying the impact of digital sepsis screening tools on patient outcomes—a multi-site natural experiment

  • ,
  • Sarah Tonkin-Crine,
  • Graham Cooke,
  • Anthony C Gordon,
  • Anthony Gordon,
  • Shashank Patil,
  • Runa Lazzarino,
  • Andrew Brent,
  • Kate Honeyford,
  • Céire E Costelloe,
  • Anne Kinderlerer,
  • John Welch,
  • Peter Ghazal,
  • Claire Burnett,
  • Alf Timney,
  • Andrew Jonathan Brent,
  • Cerie Costelloe,
  • Pippa Goodman Ben Glampson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjhci-2024-101141
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 32, no. 1

Abstract

Read online

Introduction The National Health Service (NHS) ‘move to digital’ incorporating electronic patient record systems (EPR) facilitates the translation of paper-based screening tools into digital systems, including digital sepsis alerts. We evaluated the impact of sepsis screening tools on in-patient 30-day mortality across four multi-hospital NHS Trusts, each using a different algorithm for early detection of sepsis.Methods Using quasi-experimental methods, we investigated the impact of the screening tools. Individual-level EPR data for 718 000 patients between 2010 and 2020 were extracted to assess the impact on a target cohort and control cohort using interrupted time series analysis, based on a binomial regression model. We included one Trust which uses a paper-based screening tool to compare the impact of digital and paper-based interventions, and one Trust which did not introduce a sepsis screening tool, but did introduce an EPR.Results All Trusts had lower odds of mortality, between 5% and 12%, after the introduction of the sepsis screening tool, before adjustment for pre-existing trends or patient casemix. After adjustment for existing trends, there was a significant reduction in mortality in two of the three Trusts which introduced sepsis screening tools. We also observed age-specific effects across Trusts.Conclusion Our findings confirm that patients with similar profiles have a lower mortality risk, consistent with our previous work. This study, conducted across multiple NHS Trusts, suggests that alerts could be tailored to specific patient groups based on age-related effects. Different Trusts may require unique indicators, thresholds, actions and treatments. Including additional EPR information could further enhance personalised care.