Kohei Hasegawa1, Takuyo Chiba2, Yusuke Hagiwara3, Hiroko Watase4, Yusuke Tsugawa5, David F M Brown6, Carlos A Camargo6. 1. Department of Emergency Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass. Electronic address: khasegawa1@partners.org. 2. Department of Emergency Medicine, Obama Municipal Hospital, Obama, Fukui, Japan. 3. Department of Pediatric Emergency and Critical Care Medicine, Tokyo Metropolitan Children's Medical Center, Fuchu, Tokyo, Japan. 4. Department of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, Ore. 5. Division of General Medicine and Primary Care, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, Mass; Center for Clinical Epidemiology of St Luke's Life Science Institute, Tokyo, Japan. 6. Department of Emergency Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Little is known about the quality of acute asthma care in emergency departments (EDs) outside of North America. OBJECTIVE: We evaluated concordance of acute asthma management in Japanese EDs with recommendations in the 2007 National Institutes of Health asthma guidelines and investigated whether guideline concordance was associated with risk of hospital admission. METHODS: We conducted a multicenter chart review study in 23 EDs across Japan. We identified ED patients aged 18 to 54 years with acute asthma between 2009 and 2011. Concordance with evidence-based guideline recommendations was evaluated by using item-by-item quality measures and composite concordance scores both at patient and ED levels. These scores ranged from 0 to 100. RESULTS: Among 1380 patients, the median age was 35 years and 11% were hospitalized. Overall guideline concordance score was suboptimal both at the patient level (mean ± SD, 72 ± 14) and ED level (mean ± SD, 72 ± 6). Specifically, asthma care at the patient level was suboptimal in several areas: inhaled anticholinergics in ED (2%), systemic corticosteroid in ED (56%) and at discharge (36%), and peak flow assessment (9%). A multivariable model that adjusted for severity at presentation and several ED characteristics showed that higher guideline concordance was associated with significantly lower risk of hospital admission (odds ratio, 0.70 per 10-unit increase in composite score; 95% CI, 0.62-0.79 per 10-unit increase in composite score). CONCLUSION: The management of acute asthma in Japanese EDs is suboptimal. Greater concordance with guideline-recommended management might reduce unnecessary hospitalizations. Knowledge translation initiatives are warranted to increase adherence with best practice in acute asthma management.
BACKGROUND: Little is known about the quality of acute asthma care in emergency departments (EDs) outside of North America. OBJECTIVE: We evaluated concordance of acute asthma management in Japanese EDs with recommendations in the 2007 National Institutes of Health asthma guidelines and investigated whether guideline concordance was associated with risk of hospital admission. METHODS: We conducted a multicenter chart review study in 23 EDs across Japan. We identified ED patients aged 18 to 54 years with acute asthma between 2009 and 2011. Concordance with evidence-based guideline recommendations was evaluated by using item-by-item quality measures and composite concordance scores both at patient and ED levels. These scores ranged from 0 to 100. RESULTS: Among 1380 patients, the median age was 35 years and 11% were hospitalized. Overall guideline concordance score was suboptimal both at the patient level (mean ± SD, 72 ± 14) and ED level (mean ± SD, 72 ± 6). Specifically, asthma care at the patient level was suboptimal in several areas: inhaled anticholinergics in ED (2%), systemic corticosteroid in ED (56%) and at discharge (36%), and peak flow assessment (9%). A multivariable model that adjusted for severity at presentation and several ED characteristics showed that higher guideline concordance was associated with significantly lower risk of hospital admission (odds ratio, 0.70 per 10-unit increase in composite score; 95% CI, 0.62-0.79 per 10-unit increase in composite score). CONCLUSION: The management of acute asthma in Japanese EDs is suboptimal. Greater concordance with guideline-recommended management might reduce unnecessary hospitalizations. Knowledge translation initiatives are warranted to increase adherence with best practice in acute asthma management.
Authors: Kohei Hasegawa; Yusuke Tsugawa; Sunday Clark; Carly D Eastin; Susan Gabriel; Vivian Herrera; Jane C Bittner; Carlos A Camargo Journal: Chest Date: 2016-04-04 Impact factor: 9.410
Authors: Andy Jun Wei Wong; Jing Jing Chan; Mariko Siyue Koh; Sherman Wei Qiang Lian; Stephanie Man Chung Fook; Marcus Eng Hock Ong Journal: J Acute Med Date: 2018-09-01