| Literature DB >> 23392562 |
Yi Xie1, Robin Morgan, Linda Schiff, Debbie Hannah, James Wheless.
Abstract
Time to treatment of seizures is critical to efficacy. We performed a quality initiative and evaluated time to treatment of inpatient seizure emergencies with first- and second-line medicines before and after implementation of a computerized, standard treatment protocol. Data from 125 patients revealed that 179 seizure episodes required first-line antiepileptic drugs, and the mean time to treatment was 7.72 minutes. In 87 episodes, patients (49%) received the drugs within 5 minutes. Forty-six episodes required second-line drugs. In 17 (37%), patients received them within 30 minutes (mean 49.48 minutes). After implementation of the protocol, the mean time to treatment with first-line drugs was 3.74 minutes, a reduction of >50% (P < .0001). The mean time to treatment with second-line drugs was 25.05 minutes, a reduction of ∼50% (P < .0001). This effective model for reducing the time to treatment of seizure emergencies may be useful to similar institutions.Entities:
Keywords: antiepileptic drugs; computerized physician order entry; emergency; neuroscience ward; protocol; seizure; status epilepticus
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23392562 DOI: 10.1177/0883073812474950
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Child Neurol ISSN: 0883-0738 Impact factor: 1.987