Author: Viet Tran Page 2 of 4

CIS Inbox Migration

You might have noticed your inbasket folders suddenly look different.

The ones with _CAPITAL will migrate over (stay in your inbasket) during 2/8/2025 Instance Simplification. The rest WILL NOT, so please read below on how to take care of the ones you want to ‘save’ (short answer- use Patient Reminders).

GSAA Etiquette for Clinician-to-Clinician Chart Chat

Chart Chat is now an essential tool to be leveraged between clinician in order to provide high quality patient care. Below are recommendations created with the intent to improve the communication between clinicians via KP HealthConnect Chart Chat in Kaiser Permanente NCAL.

Best Practices for Clinician-to-Clinician Chart Chat

Chart chat messages should be clinical and concise. Send as few messages as possible to minimize disruptions.

Use Emojis instead of acknowledgements like “Thank you” and “Got it!”. Emojis result in fewer interruptions as they do not push notifications to members of a conversation.

In the Inpatient space, Chart Chat can be used to communicate urgent/emergently, but discretion should be used by the sender, and if it is felt that a 20 minute response time interval is too long, direct (phone call) communication may be a better option. 

If your chat conversations last longer than a few messages or if there is a complex issue requiring significant background information or discussion, consider a phone call as a better option.

Attach the patient chart to the chat if you are messaging about a patient. This better delineates to the receiving provider which patient the message is about.

If your chart chat remains unread after a reasonable amount of time, consider reaching out to the person via another mode of communication. 

Haiku Best Practices:

Allow “Push Notifications”

Allow “Break Through Do Not Disturb Availability”. This allows you to set your status to Do Not Disturb (you will not get alerts from non-clinicians) while still being able to get clinician-to-clinician alerts. Recommended for providers who are “On-Call”

Allow “Play Sound” which will allow you to hear a new chart chat alert if you are in Haiku (but not in Chart Chat).

Login to Haiku at the beginning of your workday, similar to how you login to your computer. Logging in before getting a new message will allow you to take advantage of “message preview” on your KP iPhone home screen as well as the quick jump to Chart Chat from the KP iPhone home screen and also ClinConnect Haiku icon.

Getting into the habit of setting your status helps minimize accidental off-hour alerts.

Understanding availability statuses for providers:

When messaging someone via Chart Chat, the receiving individual’s “Availability Status” appears beside their name.

During daytime hours: 

Available: The provider user is logged into a KPHC workstation.

Busy: The default status when a provider user is not logged into KPHC. If the person is working clinically that day, they will likely see your message the next time they log into KPHC or look at Haiku on their mobile device.  Most clinicians who carry mobile devices with KPHC loaded will get a notification on their device.  

Do Not Disturb: You can set this status when you are in a procedure or are “on-call” after normal clinical hours. Additionally, surgeons will have this status set automatically based on their OR cases. Users will not receive notifications on their mobile devices while they are in “Do Not Disturb” status, except from other clinicians (provided they have allowed “Break Through Do Not Disturb Availability”. This setting is meant to convey to staff that they should not expect a quick response to their message.

Offline: Users are not reachable by Chart Chat when in this status.  This status is manually set by the user. 

Home Infusion Discharge Orders

  1. Order home IV in the home IV section, using the home infusion order set (no new changes)
  2. Only need to put end date in the admin instructions (some abx will have the type of pump automatically selected)
  3. Sign order (not sign/held, no new changes here either)
  4. Order will be sent electronically to Home Infusion Pharmacy, a hard copy is not required (this is new, this week, PICC RN still asked for hard copy or wet signature, which is not needed)
  5. Home abx will be shown in a new section, Home Infusion Medications, on the AVS/d/c instruction, not Medications with the other PO meds (this is new)​

Click here for full Job Aid on Home Infusion Discharge Orders

Emergent HD Catheter Placement Workflow

Emergent HD Catherter – After Hours Workflow – 08-26-22

Emergent HD Catherter – Business Hours Workflow – 08-26-22

Discharge from ER

  1. Go to Discharge Navigator and click on “Reconcile Orders.” Click on the “Click Here” button below “Reconcile and Write Discharge orders”

2. Click on the appropriate Rx fill mode. Default will be San Leandro Pharmacy.

3. Reconcile patient’s medications. Continue any outpatient meds or order any new inpatient medications here.

4. If patient is picking up medication at a different pharmacy, click on “KP SLN DISCHARGE” and search for the appropriate pharmacy in the pop-up window. Otherwise, click on “Sign & Hold Orders”

5. Next click on “Write Discharge Instructions.” Use the dotphrase “.gsaadci”. Fill in all dropdown menus and prompts.

6. Finally click on “Order to Discharge” and write Discharge orders

Activity / Work / Caregiver Letter

  1. In the search bar type in “Work”

2) Next, choose “Activity Rx” under Workspace Activities

3) Choose the appropriate letter type “Work” or “Caregiver”

4) Click on the appropriate diagnosis and fill in the “From” and “To” fields with the amount of days you would like the patient to be off for.

5) Click on “Preview, Print, & Sign” then click Sign Only.

ACAH Insurance Column

How to add ACAH Insurance column to your list:

  1. Click on Edit List -> Properties

2. Search for ACAH, highlight the caption “ACAH Insurance” and then click on “Add Column”

3. Patients with a green light have eligible insurance and should be considered for referral; they will still need other screenings to determine eligibility to program​. Patients with a red light do not have eligible insurance and are not eligible for the program

Advanced Care At Home Intro

Advanced Care At Home (ACAH) is coming to the GSAA and that date is July 9th

Here is a quick refresher on what ACAH is and how it affects us.

  • What is ACAH? A program that takes care of patients who meet inpatient criteria but are stable enough to be managed at home. Think your failed CDA patients, cellulitis patients who failed oral therapy, CHF patients who need IV diuresis with stable oxygen requirements, neutropenic fever patients, etc. It is NOT the same as a discharged patient on home health. These patients are seen at least daily by nurses and virtual ACAH physicians. Labs (within 4 hours) and imaging are available. Patients are set up with technology to allow them to stay connected to the medical hub and communicate their needs. 
  • How it affects us: Patients that normally need admission who are candidates for ACAH may be transferred directly from ER to ACAH (without HBS involvement). Patients on your panel may be discharged sooner to ACAH. 
  • HBS roles and responsibilities: Screen through your list daily to see if there are any candidates for this program. Inform your PCC and ACAH Hospitalist to review case for ACAH admission. If approved, complete POLST, discharge summary, and order for DC to ACAH (DCI and AVS not needed). 

There will be a formal presentation during our next department meeting. For now feel free to review the following powerpoints.

ACAH HBS Role Card
ACAH Introduction Powerpoint

Medications in the Management of Delirium

MedicationUsual DosageSpecial Considerations
Haloperidol0.5 to 1mg q4h PO/IM/ IV prnBest evidence in treating delirium, can cause akathisia as high potency, Needs telemetry if using IV
Olanzapine2.5mg QHS or BID and 1.25 mg q6hrs PRNCan be deliriogenic. Good for sedation
Quetiapine12.5mg to 25 mg QHS PO plus 12.5mg q6h PRNSedating, anticholinergic. Worse for QTc. Best for Parkinson’s. LBD
Risperidone0.5 mg BID and 0.25mg q8hrs prnHigh potency, can cause akathisia
Valproic Acid250mg BID, can increase to 500mg BID if well toleratedCheck VPA level 5th day (trough), Check LFTs, NH3
Gabapentin100-300mg TID, scheduled or PRNCheck renal function before starting. Good for anxiety as well
Trazodone12.5mg BID, titrating up to 25mg BID to TID, standing or PRN for sedationUse only for sedation. Can be deliriogenic

Cardiology Workflow for Transfers for Inpatient Cath

1. Write a discharge summary (but use transfer summary template (see picture below); this is still in question per Eric Au’s email but Parv Kaur (HIM liaison) will clarify with medical records.  For now, we should write a DC summary note

2. Ensure there is an order for NPO after midnight

3.Sign ambulance form (only done at Fremont)

4. Use “INTERFACILITY CARDIAC TRANSPORT ORDERS” order-set (see attachment 2).  This order set includes the LOA order and cardiologist will click on the 4th option “Transport to another facility on a Leave of Absence-Returning”  this will hold the bed for 4 hours (see attachment 3).  Also click “yes” on medication reconciliation.  We should not be writing a separate discharge order. 

Nurse supervisor at SCL/SF will contact FRE/SLN supervisor if patient is staying or being discharged from receiving facility so our bed can be released. 

Page 2 of 4

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén