Literature DB >> 26292080

A Prospective Cohort Quality Improvement Study to Reduce the Time to Antibiotics for New Fever in Neutropenic Pediatric Oncology Inpatients.

Adam L Green1, Joanna Yi1, Natalie Bezler1, Yana Pikman1, Venée N Tubman1, Esther A Obeng1, Teresa O'Neil1, Robert Mersereau1, Lisa Morrissey1, Amy L Billett1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Fever and neutropenia (F&amp;N) is a pediatric oncology emergency due to the risk of disseminated infection. Quality improvement (QI) efforts to improve time to antibiotics for F&amp;N in the emergency department have been documented, but the issue has not been studied in the established inpatient setting. PROCEDURE: We undertook a prospective cohort QI study to decrease time to antibiotics for neutropenic pediatric oncology inpatients with new fever to <60 min. Our key intervention was discussion of a plan in case of new fever, including antibiotic(s) to be started, for each patient on rounds. Timing for each step in the process, from fever identification to antibiotic administration, was measured through the electronic medical record for each fever event.
RESULTS: The median time to antibiotics during the 3-three month intervention study period was 76.0 min, although the distribution was skewed due to several long outliers (mean 142.5, interquartile range 51-206, range 47-593 min). Time to antibiotics was significantly shorter when a fever contingency plan was documented in the most recent note than not (mean 102 vs. 254 min, P = 0.039). Over the total 2.75 year data-collection period, the quarterly percentage of patients receiving antibiotics within 60 min has improved from 35 to 65, whereas quarterly mean time to antibiotics has improved from 99 to 50 min.
CONCLUSIONS: Daily discussion of a fever contingency plan appears effective in decreasing the time to antibiotics for neutropenic pediatric oncology inpatients with new fever, likely by circumventing the need for multi-level discussion of the antibiotic plan when fever is identified.
© 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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Keywords:  fever plan; inpatient; neutropenia; quality improvement

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26292080     DOI: 10.1002/pbc.25712

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pediatr Blood Cancer        ISSN: 1545-5009            Impact factor:   3.167


  1 in total

1.  High-frequency temperature monitoring at home using a wearable device: A case series of early fever detection and antibiotic administration for febrile neutropenia with bacteremia.

Authors:  Charles Nathaniel Nessle; Christopher Flora; Erin Sandford; Sung Won Choi; Muneesh Tewari
Journal:  Pediatr Blood Cancer       Date:  2022-06-23       Impact factor: 3.838

  1 in total

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