Literature DB >> 20556534

Improved clinical outcomes combining house staff self-assessment with an audit-based quality improvement program.

Linda Kirschenbaum1, Susannah Kurtz, Mark Astiz.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: There is a focus on integrating quality improvement with medical education and advancement of the American College of Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) core competencies.
OBJECTIVE: To determine if audits of patients with unexpected admission to the medical intensive care unit using a self-assessment tool and a focused Morbidity and Mortality (M&M) conference improves patient care.
DESIGN: Charts from patients transferred from the general medical floor (GMF) to the medical intensive care unit (ICU) were reviewed by a multidisciplinary team. Physician and nursing self-assessment tools and a targeted monthly M&M conference were part of the educational component. PARTICIPANTS: Physicians and nurses participated in root cause analysis. MEASURES: Records of all patients transferred from a general medical floor (GMF) to the ICU were audited. One hundred ninety-four cases were reviewed over a 10-month period.
RESULTS: New policies regarding vital signs and house staff escalation of care were initiated. The percentage of calls for patients who met medical emergency response team/critical care consult criteria increased from 53% to 73%, nurse notification of a change in a patient's condition increased from 65% to 100%, nursing documentation of the change in the patients condition and follow-up actions increased from 65% percent to a high of 90%, the number of cardiac arrests on a GMF decreased from 3.1/1,000 discharges to 0.6/1,000 discharges (p = 0.002), and deaths on the Medicine Service decreased from 34/1,000 discharges to 24/1,000 discharges (p = 0.024).
CONCLUSION: We describe an audit-based program that involves nurses, house staff, a self-assessment tool and a focused M&M conference. The program resulted in significant policy changes, more rapid assessment of unstable patients and improved hospital outcomes.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2010        PMID: 20556534      PMCID: PMC2955460          DOI: 10.1007/s11606-010-1427-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Gen Intern Med        ISSN: 0884-8734            Impact factor:   5.128


  15 in total

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3.  Creating a quality improvement elective for medical house officers.

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4.  Use of medical emergency team (MET) responses to detect medical errors.

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5.  Real time patient safety audits: improving safety every day.

Authors:  R Ursprung; J E Gray; W H Edwards; J D Horbar; J Nickerson; P Plsek; P H Shiono; G K Suresh; D A Goldmann
Journal:  Qual Saf Health Care       Date:  2005-08

6.  A case study of translating ACGME practice-based learning and improvement requirements into reality: systems quality improvement projects as the key component to a comprehensive curriculum.

Authors:  A M Tomolo; R H Lawrence; D C Aron
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7.  Recognising clinical instability in hospital patients before cardiac arrest or unplanned admission to intensive care. A pilot study in a tertiary-care hospital.

Authors:  M D Buist; E Jarmolowski; P R Burton; S A Bernard; B P Waxman; J Anderson
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8.  Teaching and assessing resident competence in practice-based learning and improvement.

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Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2004-05       Impact factor: 5.128

9.  "Invisible" doctors: making a case for involving medical residents in hospital quality improvement programs.

Authors:  C M Ashton
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10.  Are audits wasting resources by measuring the wrong things? A survey of methods used to select audit review criteria.

Authors:  H M Hearnshaw; R M Harker; F M Cheater; R H Baker; G M Grimshaw
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  8 in total

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2.  Transforming the Morbidity and Mortality Conference to Promote Safety and Quality in a PICU.

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5.  Decreasing severe pain and serious adverse events while moving intensive care unit patients: a prospective interventional study (the NURSE-DO project).

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Review 6.  At the Crossroad with Morbidity and Mortality Conferences: Lessons Learned through a Narrative Systematic Review.

Authors:  Xin Xiong; Teela Johnson; Dev Jayaraman; Emily G McDonald; Myriam Martel; Alan N Barkun
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7.  Characteristics of morbidity and mortality conferences associated with the implementation of patient safety improvement initiatives, an observational study.

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8.  Participants' Opinion about Conduct of Morbidity and Mortality Conferences in Surgical Practice in a Tertiary Hospital, Ethiopia.

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  8 in total

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