| Literature DB >> 26033094 |
Christopher S Parshuram1,2, Karen Dryden-Palmer3, Catherine Farrell4, Ronald Gottesman5, Martin Gray6, James S Hutchison7, Mark Helfaer8, Elizabeth Hunt9, Ari Joffe10, Jacques Lacroix11, Vinay Nadkarni12, Patricia Parkin13, David Wensley14, Andrew R Willan15.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The prevention of near and actual cardiopulmonary arrest in hospitalized children is a patient safety imperative. Prevention is contingent upon the timely identification, referral and treatment of children who are deteriorating clinically. We designed and validated a documentation-based system of care to permit identification and referral as well as facilitate provision of timely treatment. We called it the Bedside Paediatric Early Warning System (BedsidePEWS). Here we describe the rationale for the design, intervention and outcomes of the study entitled Evaluating Processes and Outcomes of Children in Hospital (EPOCH). METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26033094 PMCID: PMC4458338 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-015-0712-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Differences between BedsidePEWS and other severity of illness scores
| (1) | A validated severity of illness score that is better at identifying patients at risk than the retrospective opinion of frontline nurses |
| (2) | Complete integration of scoring into routine documentation |
| (3) | Explicit care recommendations derived from the opinions of 280 healthcare professionals |
| (4) | Nurse-educator developed, provider tested implementation program |
| (5) | Pilot evaluation showing improved outcomes without additional resources |
Study definitions
| Eligible inpatient wards | Areas where care is provided to patients who are admitted to the hospital, other than the PICU, NICU, operating rooms and other designated areas where anesthetist-supervised procedures are performed |
| Admitted patients cared for in emergency departments will be regarded as in an eligible ‘ward’ if the documentation format is the same in the emergency department as in the inpatient ward. If the emergency department continues to use a separate ‘emergency department’ documentation record for admitted patients then the emergency department will be deemed an ineligible area | |
| PICU | A PICU is defined as a designated staffed area for prolonged mechanical ventilation, invasive monitoring and circulatory support for children, including but not limited to neonates. Other areas designated for patients of increased acuity, such as ‘constant observation’ or ‘high dependency’ or ‘step-down’ units, will be regarded as part of the PICU where the PICU staff physicians are wholly or jointly responsible for the care of children in these areas (can write orders in the chart). Routinely admitted patients will include children beyond the neonatal period who are <12 years of age at admission |
| MET-RRT | An MET-RRT is defined as an identified team of one or more trained healthcare professionals who report to an on-service PICU physician and perform urgent consultations on hospital inpatients. An MET-RRT ‘call’ is analogous to an ICU consultation in hospitals without an MET-RRT. As the effectors of expertise, the impact of the MET-RRT (or other ICU team) is dependent upon appropriate identification of patients at risk and timely referral |
| Urgent PICU admission | An admission to the PICU with departure from the event location in <6 h from the time the PICU admission was initiated. Initiation is the time when the PICU admission is confirmed, or confirmed as a ‘definite possibility following surgery’ in cases where post-operative care in the PICU might be required. PICU admissions initiated in the OR are also regarded as urgent ICU admissions, irrespective of the time between initiation and departure from the OR |
| Time of transfer | Transfer is when a patient is transferred urgently to a pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) in the participating hospital. The time of transfer is the arrival in the PICU. When a patient is admitted urgently from an eligible hospital ward to a PICU via a procedure in the OR, the time of transfer to the ‘PICU’ is regarded as beginning at the time of departure from the inpatient ward to the operating room. Treatments other than cardiopulmonary resuscitation provided in the operating room are not included in the calculation of the clinical deterioration event. Unexpected events occurring in the operating room that require postoperative/post-anesthetic care in the PICU, in patients who were not anticipated to require PICU at the time the patient was transferred from the inpatient ward to the operating room, will not be regarded as clinical deterioration events |
| Study Day | Study days are calendar days; they begin at 00:00:00 and end at 23:59:59 |
| Study weeks | begin on Monday and end on Sunday. The first week of the study is study week 01 |
EPOCH secondary outcomes
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|---|---|
| (1) Significant clinical deterioration event | See Table |
| (2) The nature of clinical deterioration events | Clinical deterioration events will be described by using the Children’s Resuscitation Intensity Scale (Table |
| (3) Potentially preventable cardiac arrest | Assessment of the potential preventability of cardiac arrest will be determined for all patients who had a cardiac arrest event while in an eligible inpatient ward, without a preceding DNR order (Table |
| Thus, potential preventability ratings of 4: ‘more than likely (more than 50/50, but “close call”);’ 5: ‘strong evidence of preventability;’ 6: ‘virtually certain evidence of preventability’ will be deemed potentially preventable cardiac arrest events | |
| Preventability will be rated by blinded reviewers reviewing anonymized and delinked clinical data presented in a standardized format. If consensus between the two initial reviewers still cannot be reached then the opinion of the third reviewer will be used as the consensus rating | |
| (4) Unplanned re-admission to the hospital within 48 h of hospital discharge | This outcome will be operationalized as re-admission before midnight of the second day full day after discharge. Thus, re-admission will occur before the 3rd midnight following hospital discharge |
| (5) Unplanned PICU readmission within 2 days of PICU discharge | This outcome will be operationalized as re-admission before midnight of the second full day after discharge. Thus, re-admission will occur before the 3rd midnight following PICU discharge |
| (6) PIM score predicted the risk of mortality | |
| (7) PICU mortality. | |
| (8) The PELOD score for PICU stay and the first 24 h in PICU | This score will be determined for both the entire PICU stay and the first 24 h in the PICU |
| (9) Ventilator-free days | Days alive and without invasive mechanical ventilation in the 28 days beginning at PICU admission will be recorded for the first PICU admission during each of the baseline and the post-randomization periods |
| Process of care | |
| (1) ‘Stat’ calls to physicians | Requests for immediate specific physician attendance to provide patient care to a patient admitted to an inpatient ward |
| (2) Code Blue calls | Immediate medical assistance of the resuscitation team and equipment |
| (3) Urgent consultations to the ICU or MET-RRT | The total number of new consultation episodes will be counted. Patients who have been previously consulted on will be regarded as having a new consult if an urgent call is made that results in an unplanned or earlier than planned review. Planned review involves visits by the ICU team or the MET-RRT |
| (4) Documentation | The frequency with which each of the ‘vital’ signs (HR, RR, SBP, temperature) and the other four signs of the Bedside PEWS score (transcutaneous oxygen saturation, respiratory effort, oxygen therapy, capillary refill) is documented in 24 h will be recorded from five randomly selected patients each week |
| Resource utilization | |
| Hospital length of stay | Will be assessed as the number of patient discharges divided by the number of patient days |
| following urgent ICU admission | |
| ICU length of stay | This will be expressed as the number of whole or part study days (00:00:00 – 23:59:59) a given patient was in the ICU |
| Ventilator days | This is the number of whole or part study days of invasive mechanical ventilation |
| Dialysis | ‘Dialysis’ will include hemo-filtration and hemodialysis techniques used either intermittently and continuously (or both), peritoneal dialysis, plasmaphersis and red-cell exchange |
| ECMO (days) | This is the number of whole or part study days of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation therapy provided during the ICU stay |
| Days with nitric oxide | This is the number of whole or part study days of inhaled nitric oxide therapy provided during the ICU stay |
| Perceptions of healthcare professionals | |
| Documentation and interaction survey | A 10-min survey of frontline healthcare professionals to describe their perceptions of the utility of the current documentation system, the nature of inter-professional interactions and their background |
| Decision Maker Study exit survey | Eligible decision-makers will include: hospital chief executive officers (CEOs), chief nursing officers (CNOs), vice presidents and heads of a clinical department, divisions or services. Eligible services include senior nursing administrators for inpatient ward areas, resuscitation committee heads and medical emergency team leaders. At each hospital a maximum of ten eligible leaders will be selected by the EPOCH study team |
| A minimum of four decision-makers will be identified: the CEO, CNO, clinical head of pediatric surgery and clinical head of pediatric medicine. Hospitals with more than 80 beds will identify 2 additional decision-makers; hospitals with more than 120 beds will identify 4 additional decision-makers, and hospitals with more than 180 beds will identify an additional 6 decision-makers |
Clinical deterioration events
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|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Early transfer | <60 ml/kg intravenous or intraosseous fluid resuscitation given in the 12 h before transfer, no intravenous or intraosseous inotrope or vasoactive medications and no positive pressure ventilation (bag mask or endotracheal) in the 12 h before transfer | No |
| 2 | Noninvasive respiratory support | Positive pressure ventilation in the 12 h before transfer, but not intubated at the time of transfer. This category includes children receiving mask-delivered positive airway pressure at any stage in the 12 h before transfer and at the time of transfer. Mechanical ventilation during anesthesia for a scheduled procedure is not included | No |
| 3 | Invasive respiratory support | Intubated and/or receiving endotracheal ventilation at the time of transfer or intubated within 1 h of PICU admission | Yes |
| 4 | Circulatory | >60 ml/kg intravenous or intraosseous fluid resuscitation given in the 12 h before transfer, and administration of any intravenous or intraosseous inotrope or vasopressor at the time of transfer or at any stage in the 12 h preceding transfer. Patients in this category may also receive positive pressure ventilation (2) | Yes |
| 5 | Late transfer | Respiratory (3) | Yes |
| 6 | Cardiopulmonary resuscitation | Chest compressions before transfer from ward area or within 1 h of PICU admission or ECMO instituted before or within 1 h of PICU admission | Yes |
| 7 | Death | Death on an inpatient ward, other than in those patients with DNR orders. Death may occur despite CPR (or intention to perform CPR if patient is pronounced dead without CPR). No transfer from ward area | Yes |
ECMO extracorporeal membrane oxygenation therapy.
*SCDE significant clinical deterioration event.
Potential preventability criteria
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|---|---|
| 1 | Virtually no evidence of preventability |
| 2 | Slight-to-modest evidence of preventability |
| 3 | Preventability not quite likely (less than 50/50, but “close call”) |
| 4 | Preventability more than likely (more than 50/50, but “close call”) |
| 5 | Strong evidence of preventability |
| 6 | Virtually certain evidence of preventability |
Criteria used to determine potential preventability in EPOCH. These criteria were used in the Canadian Adverse Events Study. A rating of 4 or more will be regarded as a high degree of preventability. Potentially preventable cardiac arrests will be presented as rate per thousand patient-days.
Rationale for waived patient consent in EPOCH
| 1 | Consent for routine documentation practice is implied with hospital admission + this is also true for other practices including staffing, ICU consultation, physician review |
| + Documentation is an inherent and routine part of hospital care | |
| + In intervention hospitals the BedsidePEWS becomes the accepted standard for documentation | |
| + In control hospitals and before implementation in hospitals randomized to implement BedsidePEWS, consenting to routine care in a situation where that there is no alternative is counter-intuitive | |
| 2 | Patient-level data are retrospectively obtained and + does not require patient contact |
| + does not require additional clinical investigation | |
| + precedent exists for waived consent for this type of data collection | |
| 3 | Preemptive consent for events (including in-hospital cardiac arrest, death) that have not occurred - and that may not occur |
| + Is potentially distressing to families | |
| + Is inefficient use of research resources | |
| 4 | Obtaining consent is not feasible for 100,000 patients anticipated in the study sample |
| + retrospective consent from families of deceased children may add burden and is potentially distressing to families | |
| 5 | Incomplete enrollment would undermine and bias the scientific validity of the study |
| 6 | Data will be presented in aggregate. |
| No identifying information will leave the study office in the participating hospital |