| Literature DB >> 26100026 |
Samuel Pannick1, Iain Beveridge2, Hutan Ashrafian3, Susannah J Long4, Thanos Athanasiou3, Nick Sevdalis5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The majority of preventable deaths in healthcare are due to errors on general wards. Staff perceptions of safety correlate with patient survival, but effectively translating ward teams' concerns into tangibly improved care remains problematic. The Hospital Event Analysis Describing Significant Unanticipated Problems (HEADS-UP) trial evaluates a structured, multidisciplinary team briefing, capturing safety threats and adverse events, with rapid feedback to clinicians and service managers. This is the first study to rigorously assess a simpler intervention for general medical units, alongside an implementation model applicable to routine clinical practice. METHODS/ANALYSIS: 7 wards from 2 hospitals will progressively incorporate the intervention into daily practice over 14 months. Wards will adopt HEADS-UP in a pragmatic sequence, guided by local clinical enthusiasm. Initial implementation will be facilitated by a research lead, but rapidly delegated to clinical teams. The primary outcome is excess length of stay (a surplus stay of 24 h or more, compared to peer institutions' Healthcare Resource Groups-predicted length of stay). Secondary outcomes are 30-day readmission or excess length of stay; in-hospital death or death/readmission within 30 days; healthcare-acquired infections; processes of escalation of care; use of traditional incident-reporting systems; and patient safety and teamwork climates. HEADS-UP will be analysed as a stepped wedge cluster controlled trial. With 7840 patients, using best and worst case predictions, the study would achieve between 75% and 100% power to detect a 2-14% absolute risk reduction in excess length of stay (two-sided p<0.05). Regression analysis will use generalised linear mixed models or generalised estimating equations, and a time-to-event regression model. A qualitative analysis will evaluate facilitators and barriers to HEADS-UP implementation and impact. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: Participating institutions' Research and Governance departments approved the study. Results will be published in peer-reviewed journals and at conference presentations. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ISRCTN34806867. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions.Entities:
Keywords: GENERAL MEDICINE (see Internal Medicine)
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26100026 PMCID: PMC4479997 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2014-007510
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Categories of unintended events in internal medicine departments impacting negatively on patient care (after Lubberding et al1).
Figure 2The HEADS-UP (Hospital Event Analysis Describing Significant Unanticipated Problems) team briefing tool.
Figure 3HEADS-UP (Hospital Event Analysis Describing Significant Unanticipated Problems) stepped wedge cluster design.
Study outcomes and corresponding hypotheses evaluated within the HEADS-UP trial
| Outcome component | Relevant hypothesis | Rationale for outcome selection | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary outcome | Excess length of stay | Improved clinical outcomes through ward and support service improvements | Length of stay reflects efficient resource use, and possibly quality of care. |
| Secondary outcomes: clinical outcomes | Mortality | Improved clinical outcomes through ward and support service improvements | Correlates with quality of care |
| Readmission | Improved clinical outcomes through ward and support service improvements | Need to confirm that improvements in hospital efficiency do not come at the expense of increased readmissions. | |
| Complications of care | Improved situational awareness will mitigate patient risks | Agreement that these outcomes are appropriate patient safety indicators. | |
| Secondary outcomes: processes of care | Escalation of care | Earlier team recognition of the deteriorating patient will facilitate processes underpinning escalation of care | Multidisciplinary interventions, increasing team situational awareness, |
| Secondary outcomes: staff outcomes | Staff engagement with traditional reporting system | Team-wide recognition of adverse events will improve engagement with existing incident reporting systems | More reports overall, with a lower contribution from reports of slips and falls, are associated with more positive safety culture and risk management ratings. |
| Safety and teamwork climate | Empowerment of junior clinicians, with structured communication tool, will improve perceptions of safety and teamwork | Improved safety climate is associated with organisation-wide reduction in adverse events. | |
HEADS-UP, Hospital Event Analysis Describing Significant Unanticipated Problems; SAQ, Safety Attitudes Questionnaire.