Literature DB >> 28247300

Impact of random safety analyses on structure, process and outcome indicators: multicentre study.

María Bodí1,2,3, Iban Oliva4, Maria Cruz Martín5, Maria Carmen Gilavert1, Carlos Muñoz5, Montserrat Olona2,6, Gonzalo Sirgo1,2.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: To assess the impact of a real-time random safety tool on structure, process and outcome indicators.
METHODS: Prospective study conducted over a period of 12 months in two adult patient intensive care units. Safety rounds were conducted three days a week ascertaining 37 safety measures (grouped into 10 blocks). In each round, 50% of the patients and 50% of the measures were randomized. The impact of this safety tool was analysed on indicators of structure (safety culture, healthcare protocols), process (improvement proportion related to tool application, IPR) and outcome (mortality, average stay, rate of catheter-related bacteraemias and rate of ventilator-associated pneumonia, VAP).
RESULTS: A total of 1214 patient-days were analysed. Structure indicators: the use of the safety tool was associated with an increase in the safety climate and the creation/modification of healthcare protocols (sedation/analgesia and weaning). Process indicators: Twelve of the 37 measures had an IPR > 10%; six showed a progressive decrease in the IPR over the study period. Nursing workloads and patient severity on the day of analysis were independently associated with a higher IPR in half of the blocks of variables. Outcome indicators: A significant decrease in the rate of VAP was observed.
CONCLUSIONS: The real-time random safety tool improved the care process and adherence to clinical practice guidelines and was associated with an improvement in structure, process and outcome indicators.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Critical patients; Intensive care unit; Quality indicators; Real-time safety audits; Safety

Year:  2017        PMID: 28247300      PMCID: PMC5331020          DOI: 10.1186/s13613-017-0245-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Intensive Care        ISSN: 2110-5820            Impact factor:   6.925


Background

The application of evidence-based medicine is of major concern in intensive care medicine today [1]. Errors in health care may occur due to an unintended act or by omission. Those resulting from the former are more visible and therefore more easily detectable. Errors of omission are more insidious and more difficult to identify and include the failure to ensure that patients receive recommended medical care as supported by high-quality clinical research evidence [2], which occurs paradoxically in more severe patients [3]. For example, the lack of adherence to clinical practice guidelines may be due to the lack of knowledge about them and the presence of barriers that prevent their use such as a lack of time, a lack of resources, organizational aspects or even resistance to changing work habits. To analyse and prevent patient safety-related incidents, reactive or proactive tools are used. These are complementary to each other. Checklists have been proposed as a simple and useful proactive method to prevent errors of commission and omission in critically ill patients [4, 5]. The complex reality in which they need to be implemented requires an approach that includes more than eliminating barriers and supporting facilitating factors. Implementation leaders must facilitate team learning to foster the mutual understanding of perspectives and motivations and the realignment of routines [6]. Among the various proactive methods, random safety audits [7] facilitate the interaction between the responsible team and the professional who verifies the safety measures, and have the potential to reduce future errors through the identification of system failures that contribute to gaps in quality and safety. This tool promotes the changes in accordance with the application of scientific evidence, feedback with the team, and providing and strengthening knowledge [8]. Weiss et al. [9] showed that checklists of safety measures guided by an observer (prompter) decreased mortality and average length of stay in an intensive care unit (ICU) compared to those carried out through self-verification. Our group has developed and validated a tool—the real-time random safety audits (in Spanish: Análisis Aleatorios de Seguridad en Tiempo Real, AASTRE)—and found it to be effective in detecting and remedying errors of omission in real time, thereby improving adherence to guidelines [10] and proving to be most useful in situations of high care load and in more severe patients [11]. Thus, this multicentre study aims to investigate the usefulness of the AASTRE by measuring their effect on structure, process and outcome indicators.

Methods

Study design and participating centres

This is a prospective study involving two university hospitals over a 1-year period (January–December 2013). Table 1 shows the characteristics of the two centres and the most relevant initiatives implemented in terms of patient safety.
Table 1

Characteristics of the centres and safety-related initiatives

Hospital 1Hospital 2
No. of hospital beds250350
Teaching hospital
 UndergraduateYesYes
 Resident physicianNoYes
No. of ICU beds
 Total at the centre1630
 ICU participating in study1614
Computerized ICUYesYes
Active protocol for:
 Sedation and analgesiaNoYes
 WeaningNoYes
 Enteral nutritionYesYes
 Monitoring and MV alarmsNoNo
Register of AENoNo
Voluntary reporting of AEYesYes
ENVIN-ICU participation (BZ, NZ, RZ)YesYes
Other checklist systems (Not AASTRE)Prevention of VAP, CRBPrevention of VAP, CRB, intrahospital transfer
Patient typesMedicalMedical, surgical, trauma
Surgical
Trauma
Coronary

No. absolute number, ICU intensive care unit, MV mechanical ventilation, AE adverse events, ENVIN (National Nosocomial Infections Surveillance Study), BZ Bacteremia Zero Spanish Project, NZ Pneumonia Zero Spanish Project, RZ Resistance Zero Spanish Project, VAP ventilator-associated pneumonia, CRB catheter-related bloodstream infection

Characteristics of the centres and safety-related initiatives No. absolute number, ICU intensive care unit, MV mechanical ventilation, AE adverse events, ENVIN (National Nosocomial Infections Surveillance Study), BZ Bacteremia Zero Spanish Project, NZ Pneumonia Zero Spanish Project, RZ Resistance Zero Spanish Project, VAP ventilator-associated pneumonia, CRB catheter-related bloodstream infection

Methodology for the implementation of the AASTRE

Design and description of the checklist

The checklist, as previously validated [10], consists of 37 safety measures grouped into ten blocks of different areas of care: mechanical ventilation, haemodynamics, renal function and continuous renal replacement techniques (CRRT), sedation and analgesia, treatment (two blocks), nutrition, techniques and tests, nursing care and structure. AASTRE are standardly performed three days per week (including weeks with weekday holidays and holiday periods), with 50% of the safety measures and 50% of the ICU patients randomized on each day of analysis. Each safety measure has a specific definition, assessment criteria and a specific methodology for verification. All patients admitted to the ICU are eligible for AASTRE to be performed on them. However, for each selected patient, only those measures for which they meet the assessment criteria will be evaluated [11].

Role and training of prompters

The safety audits are always carried out immediately after the ICU daily clinical round and require the participation of a prompter and the healthcare professionals directly responsible for patient care (senior attending physician, residents and nurses). The prompter is one of the two senior attending physicians of each ICU (not directly caring for the patient) who has received the education and training required by the study and who is responsible for verifying and/or promoting the safety measures. At all centres, training sessions were held on the theoretical aspects and the methodology used in the AASTRE. In addition, all prompters were trained online in the goals of the study and in the use of the tool. Moreover, practical training was also required, carrying out at least three safety rounds prior to the start of the study.

Safety audits

Many of the measures included in the checklist are routinely carried out by healthcare professionals during the ICU daily clinical round. The purpose of the safety audits is to verify that they have indeed been carried out. If this were not the case (error of omission), the prompter reminds the healthcare professionals that they should be carried out. In this framework, the possible responses during the audits are: (1) “Yes”—when the measure analysed had been taken/performed on the ICU daily round; (2) “Yes, after AASTRE”—when the safety audit was used to detect an error of omission that has been corrected; (3) “No”—when the measure analysed could not be changed despite the audit; (4) “Not applicable”—when the patient did not meet the assessment criteria. The checklist and the responses of the evaluations are entered into a web platform (http://www.aastre.es). Safety audits were performed with a tablet at the bedside to facilitate implementation.

Definition of variables and indicators

Number of patient-days was the number of patients assessed in the total number of days on which safety audits were carried out in the two hospitals. Structure indicators Perception of safety culture (in Hospital 2): We used a previously validated questionnaire [12] based on the Safety Climate Survey (SCS) and the Safety Attitude Questionnaire-ICU model (SAQ-ICU). It analysed six dimensions: teamwork climate, safety climate, perceptions of management, job satisfaction, working conditions, and stress recognition. The questionnaire on the perception of safety culture was administered to medical, nursing and ancillary staff. Three evaluation periods were considered: 1) initial period: the month prior to the start of the study; 2) intermediate period: month 6 of the study; 3) final period: the month after the end of the study. The execution or updating of protocols and/or procedures promoted by the AASTRE was investigated. Process indicators The proportion of changes in the care process carried out as a result of verification was considered. IPR-AASTRE (improvement proportion related to the AASTRE) were calculated globally (IPR-AASTRE-G), for each safety measure (IPR-AASTRE), and for each block of variables (IPR-AASTRE-B), according to the following formulas: IPR-AASTRE-B helped simplify the assessment of the impact of other variables on utility. These variables are: type of patient (medical, surgical, neurocritical and trauma), staffing ratio [PNR; patient:nurse ratio (≤2:1 vs. >2:1) and PPR; patient:physician ratio (≤2:1, 2–3:1, >3:1)], the Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) score and length of stay (length of stay at the time of safety audits (<7, 7–14, >14 days). Outcome indicators The impact by the AASTRE on ICU mortality, average stay and rates of central venous catheter-related bacteraemia (CRB) and ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) using standardized definitions [13, 14] was investigated. The clinical definition of VAP requires patients to fulfil one radiographic, one systemic, and two pulmonary criteria. Radiographic criteria include new or progressive infiltrates, consolidation and cavitation. Systemic criteria include fever, abnormal white blood cell count and altered mental status. Pulmonary criteria include purulent sputum, new or worsening cough or dyspnoea or tachypnea, rales or bronchial breath sounds, and worsening gas exchange. CRB is defined in a patient with a central venous catheter with at least one positive blood culture (two blood culture if common skin contaminant organism) obtained from a peripheral vein, clinical manifestations of infections (i.e. fever, chills and/or hypotension), and no apparent source for the bloodstream infection except the catheter. One of the following should be present: a positive semi-quantitative (>15 CFU per catheter segment) or quantitative (>102 CFU per catheter segment) catheter culture, whereby the same organism (species) is isolated from a catheter segment and a peripheral blood culture; simultaneous quantitative blood cultures with a ratio of >3:1 CFU/ml of blood (catheter vs. peripheral blood); differential time to positivity (growth in a culture of blood obtained through a catheter hub is detected by an automated blood culture system at least 2 h earlier than a culture of simultaneously drawn peripheral blood of equal volume). The information relative to VAP and CRB was collected prospectively at both centres participating in the study and the previous year, using identical diagnostic criteria.

Statistical analysis

For descriptive analysis, we used absolute numbers (N) and relative frequency (percentage) for categorical variables; the mean and standard deviation for continuous variables. Chi-square tests and linear trend Chi-square tests were used for categorical variables and Student’s t test for continuous variables in univariate analysis. For multivariate analysis, multiple logistic regression, fixed model and likelihood ratio method analyses were performed to ascertain the impact of different variables on the IPR-AASTRE-B and with the aim of adjusting for possible confounding effects. The results were expressed as odds ratio and their 95% confidence interval (CI). We used direct standardization by APACHE 2012 (<15, 15–25, >25) to evaluate mortality change and incidence density ratio (IDR) 2013 vs 2012 and CI to evaluate CRB and VAP incidence changes. The acceptable level of statistical significance was set at p ≤ 0.05. All data analyses were performed using the SPSS version 15 statistical package (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL).

Results

During the study period, AASTRE were carried out on 1214 patient-days. Table 2 shows the distribution of the type of patients evaluated globally, and in each hospital, the workloads (of nursing staff and physicians), the seriousness of the patients measured using the SOFA and patients’ length of stay on the day the safety rounds were conducted. Most patients were medical (47.0%), with a PNR ≤2:1 (57.0%), a PPR 2–3:1(62.1%), SOFA <4 (56.9%) and an average stay <7 days (42.5%). It should be noted that the distribution of the types of patients evaluated is different in the two hospitals of the study. In Hospital 1, there was a predominance of medical patients (57.6%), followed by surgical patients (32.7%). In Hospital 2, although the evaluation of medical patients predominated (41.3%), followed by surgical patients (31.6%), there was a significantly higher percentage of assessments of neurosurgical (13.4%) and trauma patients (13.7%). The nursing workload was higher in Hospital 1, where in most cases each nurse takes care of more than two patients. With regard to the physicians’ workload, it was significantly higher in Hospital 1. It is in this centre that most frequently a physician treats more than three patients (36%). In terms of patient severity on the day of the administration of the AASTRE, the only differences found were in the SOFA subgroup <4 (more prevalent in Hospital 1, 67.1%) and in the SOFA subgroup 4–7 (more prevalent in Hospital 2, 32.7%). Finally, in respect of length of stay in the ICU on the day of the AASTRE, in Hospital 1 there was a significant predominance of patients whose length of stay was less than seven days (54%), the rest of the periods considered were significantly more prevalent in Hospital 2 except the period of ≥21 days, which was virtually identical in both hospitals.
Table 2

Distribution of the type and severity of patient disease/condition, staffing ratios and length of stay on the day of evaluation

GlobalHospital 1Hospital 2 p
N % N % N %
Patient type<0.0001
 Medical57047.024257.632841.3
 Neurosurgery1189.7122.910613.4
 Surgical39732.714634.825131.6
 Traumatic12910.6204.710913.7
PNR<0.0001
 ≤ 2:178764.8163.877197.1
 >2:142735.240496.2232.9
PPR<0.0001
 ≤2:114311.8296.911414.4
 2–3:175662.324057.151665.0
 >3:131525.915136.016420.6
SOFA0.001
 <472359.628267.144155.6
 4–735729.39723.126032.7
 8–121109.1317.4799.9
 ≥12242.0102.4141.8
Length of stay<0.0001
 <753243.822754.030538.4
 7–1423719.56214.817522.0
 14–2114612.0296.911714.8
 ≥2129924.710224.319724.8

PNR patient:nurse ratio, PPR patient:physician ratio, SOFA Sequential Organ Failure Assessment

Distribution of the type and severity of patient disease/condition, staffing ratios and length of stay on the day of evaluation PNR patient:nurse ratio, PPR patient:physician ratio, SOFA Sequential Organ Failure Assessment

Structure indicators

Perception of safety culture: The response rate to the perception of safety culture questionnaire that had been administered to 71 professionals was 94.4% (in the initial period), 66.6% (in the intermediate period) and 70.4% (in the final period). A progressive increase was observed in positive responses in the Safety Climate item throughout the study period (p < 0.0001) in the safety culture perception survey. No significant changes were observed in the other items (Table 3).
Table 3

Safety culture survey results in Hospital 2

DimensionsStart of study N = 67Positive responses, %Intermediate period N = 46Positive responses, %End period N = 48Positive responses, % p
Atmosphere in place of work74.567.473.4NS
Relations with colleagues64.259.860.9NS
Organization and management of the service and the hospital40.835.542.2NS
Safety climate 58.3 61.1 69.8 p < 0.0001
Work conditions45.637.949.5NS
Recognition of stress level49.443.947.3NS
Total 56.1 53.8 60.2 p = 0.005

NS no significant differences

Italic text: significant differences

Safety culture survey results in Hospital 2 NS no significant differences Italic text: significant differences Implementation or updating of protocols and/or procedures: The use of the AASTRE was associated with changes in sedation/analgesia and weaning protocols at both hospitals. It is also noteworthy that in the two hospitals of the study, the use of AASTRE motivated the creation of a new procedure of the prescription and review of monitoring and mechanical ventilation (MV) alarms.

Process indicators

The overall IPR-AASTRE-G were 6.7%. Table 4 shows the distribution of patients evaluated for each measure and improvement proportion related to the AASTRE (IPR-AASTRE), and their evolution throughout the study period. Twelve of the 37 measures (32.4%) had IPR-AASTRE >10%. Some are included in the bundles to prevent VAP (evaluation of the level of sedation and pain in the sedated patient, semi-recumbent position) and CRB (daily assessment of catheter needs); others in the good medical practice guidelines (verification of alveolar pressure in patients with acute respiratory failure, assessment of acute renal failure and artificial nutrition) and in the basic safety measures (appropriate treatment prescription, review of MV or monitor alarms, patient identification).
Table 4

Distribution of evaluated patients for every measure and improvement proportion related to the AASTRE (IPR-AASTRE)

Evaluated patients (IPR-AASTRE, %)TotalEvaluated patients (IPR-AASTRE, %)Quarter 1Evaluated patients (IPR-AASTRE, %)Quarter 2Evaluated patients (IPR-AASTRE, %)Quarter 3 p
Block 1. Mechanical ventilation
 1. Alveolar pressure limit124 (26.6)71 (26.8)20 (45.0)33 (15.2)0.12
 2. Mechanical ventilation alarms398 (31.2)155 (34.2)119 (33.6)124 (25.0)0.001
 3. Tolerance to spontaneous ventilation175 (1.1)59 (1.7)56 (0.0)60 (1.7)0.62
 4. Suitable current volume336 (1.5)17 (2.6)107 (0.9)112 (0.9)0.47
Block 2. Haemodynamics
 5. Monitor alarms557 (21.5)223 (23.3)142 (23.9)192 (17.7)<0.0001
 6. Water balance and fluid adjustment557 (1.1)223 (0.5)142 (0.7)192 (2.8)0.36
 7. Adequate haemodynamic monitoring556 (0.4)223 (0.0)141 (0.7)192 (0.5)0.49
 8. Fluid therapy and amines adjustment according to monitoring93 (1.1)40 (0.0)19 (0.0)34 (2.9)0.41
Block 3. Renal function and CRRT
 9. Acute renal failure assessment654 (11.8)280 (14.6)160 (10.6)214 (8.9)0.03
 10. CRRT treatment prescription27 (3.7)13 (0.0)6 (0.0)8 (12.5)0.29
 11. CRRT monitoring28 (0.0)14 (0.0)6 (0.0)8 (0.0)Not calculable
Block 4. Sedation/analgesia
 12. Evaluation of sedation level and pain of sedated patient199 (11.6)86 (15.1)61 (9.8)52 (7.7)0.30
 13. Pain assessment in non-sedated patient396 (8.6)137 (13.1)110 (5.5)149 (6.7)0.19
 14. Oversedation prevention132 (9.8)65 (10.8)42 (2.4)25 (20.0)0.16
Block 5. Treatment (1)
 15. Check drug allergies and intolerances in patient’s medical history623 (4.8)268 (4.1)161 (6.8)194 (1.6)0.10
 16. Correct prescription of daily treatment orders623 (4.8)268 (5.6)161 (4.9)194 (3.6)0.66
 17. Adequate indication and dosage of the prescribed medication622 (3.9)268 (4.9)160 (3.8)194 (2.6)0.37
 18. Prescribed treatment administered correctly. Verbal orders623 (1.9)268 (3.4)161 (0.0)194 (1.6)<0.0001
Block 6. Treatment (2)
 19. Prevention of thromboembolic disease549 (4.9)249 (7.2)146 (3.4)154 (2.6)0.04
 20. Prophylaxis of gastrointestinal haemorrhage587 (0.3)266 (0.4)159 (0.0)162 (0.6)0.63
 21. Control of hyperglycaemia588 (1.4)264 (1.5)160 (1.3)164 (1.2)0.85
 22. Assessment of the antibiotic treatment436 (2.3)195 (3.1)119 (0.8)122 (2.5)0.43
 23. Appropriate transfusion554 (0.2)233 (0.0)157 (0.6)164 (0.0)0.49
Block 7. Techniques and tests
 24. Checking of X-ray slides539 (1.5)186 (1.6)165 (2.4)188 (0.5)0.34
 25. Daily assessment of the need for catheters624 (16.8)225 (16.0)183 (19.7)216 (15.3)0.46
Block 8. Nutrition
 26. Monitoring of enteral nutrition487 (24.6)241 (27.0)117 (27.4)129 (17.8)0.11
 27. Daily assessment by parenteral nutrition team78 (23.1)24 (4.2)25 (24.0)29 (37.9)0.04
Block 9. Nursing care
 28. Verification of endotracheal tube cuff pressure436 (0.5)195 (0.0)127 (0.8)114 (0.9)0.58
 29. Oral hygiene with chlorhexidine (0.12–0.2%)476 (0.4)217 ((0.5)138 (0.7)121 (0.0)0.52
 30. Daily assessment of the risk of developing pressure ulcers563 (12.3)282 (18.1)151 (6.6)130 (6.2)<0.0001
 31. Daily assessment of the protective measures for the safe handling of the patient557 (1.1)281 (1.1)148 (1.4)128 (0.8)0.47
 32. Semi-recumbent position433 (21.7)196 (20.9)123 (24.4)114 (20.2)0.48
Block 10. Structure
 33. Unequivocal patient identification594 (12.5)243 (14.4)190 (12.1)161 (9.9)0.42
 34. Patient clinical information properly structured in the medical history592 (24.8)243 (26.3)189 (29.1)160 (17.5)0.06
 35. Life-sustaining treatment limit sheet updated82 (9.8)30 (10.0)22 (4.5)30 (13.3)0.44
 36. Correct position of bed rails584 (0.3)240 (0.8)185 (0.0)159 (0.0)0.24
 37. Information to family members592 (0.2)242 (0.4)189 (0.0)161 (0.0)0.46

CRRT continuous renal replacement techniques

Distribution of evaluated patients for every measure and improvement proportion related to the AASTRE (IPR-AASTRE) CRRT continuous renal replacement techniques Only six steps (verification of MV or monitor alarms, proper administration of the prescribed treatment, assessment of acute renal failure and the risk of developing pressure ulcers and prevention of thromboembolic disease) showed a progressive decrease in the IPR-AASTRE throughout the study period. In addition, in one measure (“daily assessment by parenteral nutrition team”), a significant increase was seen in IPR-AASTRE as it was assessed during the different four-month periods. Table 5 shows the impact of the independent variables selected (type of patient, staffing ratio, severity and length of stay) in the IPR-AASTRE-B. The high PNR was associated with a higher IPR-AASTRE in the MV and haemodynamics blocks. The SOFA was associated independently with a higher IPR-AASTRE-B in four blocks. Finally, the length of stay was significantly inversely associated with the IPR-AASTRE-B of the techniques and tests and treatment blocks.
Table 5

Variables related to the utility of the AASTRE (multivariate analysis)

RatioPatients:nursesOR (95% CI)RatioPatients: physiciansOR (95% CI)SOFAOR (95% CI)Patient typeOR (95% CI)Length of stayOR (95% CI)
Mechanical ventilation 2.6 (1.16.7) 0.9 (0.7–1.0) 1.4 (1.11.7) 1.1 (1.0–1.4)0.9 (073–1.0)
Haemodynamics 2.9 (1.27.4) 0.9 (0.6–1.3)0.9 (0.7–1.3)0.9 (0.8–1.2)0.9 (0.8–1.2)
Renal function/CRRT0.3 (0.0–1.4)0.9 (0.6–1.4) 2.0 (1.52.5) 1.1 (0.9–1.4)0.9 (0.8–1.1)
Sedation and analgesia0.9 (0.2–3.5)0.9 (0.5–1.3)1.2 (0.8–1.7)1.0 (0.8–1.3)0.9 (0.7–1.1)
Treatment 10.5 (0.1–2.7)1.4 (0.9–2.0) 1.4 (1.11.8) 0.9 (0.8–1.1) 0.8 (0.60.9)
Treatment 21.5 (0.2–11.1)1.5 (0.9–2.5)1.1 (0.8–1.7)0.9 (0.7–1.3) 0.6 (0.40.8)
Techniques and tests1.3 (0.4–3.6)0.6 (0.4–1.9)0.9 (0.7–1.2)0.9 (0.8–1.2) 0.7 (0.50.9)
Nutrition0.5 (0.1–2.5)1.2 (0.8–1.6)0.9 (0.8–1.3)1.1 (0.9–1.3)0.9 (0.8–1.1)
Nursing care1.2 (0.5–3.2)1.1 (0.8–1.4) 1.4 (1.11.7) 0.9 (0.8–1.1)0.9 (0.8–1.2)
Structure1.0 (0.4–2.5)1.0 (0.7–1.2)1.2 (1.0–1.5)1.1 (0.9–1.3)0.9 (0.8–1.1)

CRRT continuous renal replacement techniques

Italic text: significant OR

Variables related to the utility of the AASTRE (multivariate analysis) CRRT continuous renal replacement techniques Italic text: significant OR

Outcome indicators

The use of the AASTRE was associated with a significant decline in the VAP rate. No significant impact on average stay, mortality and CRB rate was observed (Table 6).
Table 6

Outcome indicators

YearHospital 1Hospital 2
20122013 p 20122013 p
Number of patients9671018939927
APACHE II10.411.20.3914.914.40.72
ICU average LOS (days)3.34.00.097.77.90.07
ICU gross mortality (%)4.05.119.016.1
ICU standardized mortality by APACHE 2012 (%)4.04.30.2319.016.50.15
VAP rate (No. of VAP episodes/1000 days MV)4.20.97.94.0
IDR VAP2013/2012 (95% confidence interval)0.2 (0.05–0.9)0.020.5 (0.3–0.9)0.03
CRB rate (No. of CRB episodes/1000 days of central venous catheter)3.91.52.84.8
CRB IDR2013/2012 (95% confidence interval)0.4 (0.1–1.2)0.421.7 (0.7–3.9)0.10

N number, VAP ventilator-associated pneumonia, MV mechanical ventilation, CRB central venous catheter-related bacteraemia , IDR incidence density ratio

Outcome indicators N number, VAP ventilator-associated pneumonia, MV mechanical ventilation, CRB central venous catheter-related bacteraemia , IDR incidence density ratio

Discussion

Checklists have been proposed as tools to ensure that essential components of care are not omitted [15]. However, this is the first multicentre study to analyse the impact of real-time random safety audits on quality indicators in the critical patient. An improvement is seen in indicators of structure (safety climate, clinical protocols and healthcare procedures), process (better adherence to good clinical practice guidelines) and outcome (decline in the rate of VAP) [16]. These data support a way to improve health care for the critical patient by means of the AASTRE tool whose use is feasible as shown in the pilot study published previously by our group [10]. The use of the AASTRE was associated with an improvement in the safety climate. An association has been described between a better safety climate and outcome [17], average stay [18] or adverse events [19]. Although other authors have not demonstrated that checklists improve communication and teamwork [20], the impact of the AASTRE on the safety climate could be the result of improved communication in clinical practice, as described in other tools [21]. The guidelines require local adaptation via local protocols to enable their effective, safe and efficient use [22, 23]. The AASTRE were associated with the need to renew sedation/analgesia and weaning protocols. This occurs as a natural consequence when verifying the safety measures using AASTRE reflexively and at the bedside. This highlights the need to update local protocols in accordance with the latest sources of scientific knowledge. Difficulties for adherence have been described [24, 25] in both protocols. The AASTRE allow evaluating adherence to protocols and can promote their regular updating. The AASTRE have improved safety in relation to monitoring and mechanical ventilation alarms through the creation of specific protocols. While the beneficial effect of the introduction of protocols in clinical practice has been discussed [26, 27], most studies acknowledge that they are useful although more patently in hands of inexperienced healthcare providers or suboptimal work environments. In such malfunctioning environments, they help but may hinder the performance and progress of the health professional, reducing their autonomy [28]. In fact, in a study published recently, no effect of the protocols was observed in the outcome [29]. Therefore, AASTRE promote much needed professional autonomy but invites reflection as to decisions at the bedside. And this reflection leads to the updating of protocols even though a direct improvement in the results is not guaranteed.

Process indicators: IPR-AASTRE

Health care requires many more scientifically sound process measures than are currently available. The AASTRE are process indicators since they evaluate the degree of adherence to scientific evidence [30]. They allow measuring the gap between the indication of therapies that have proven effective within human clinical research and the real safe and effective use of these therapies in routine clinical practice. The failure to ensure that patients receive recommended medical care is supported by high-quality clinical research evidence. This type of safety and quality problem can be effectively addressed with knowledge translation tools [23]. The fact that 12 of the 37 measures considered (32.4%) had IPR-AASTRE >10% shows the ability of the AASTRE to modify essential aspects of clinical practice and improve adherence to evidence-based guidelines, a priority in health care [11, 23, 31]. Hopefully, through organizational learning, this effect could be maintained over time [32]. In this regard, some authors [33] have described the ability of checklists to maintain adherence to good clinical practice guidelines achieving close to 100% compliance for semi-recumbent position or suitable sedation. However, in our study, these measures scored IPR-AASTRE of 21.7 and 11.6%, indicating that if the intervention (AASTRE) had not been implemented, the measure would not have been carried out in a large percentage of patients. Also, the evaluation of another essential measure as is the assessment of catheter needs, in our experience, was corrected in 16.8% of evaluations. The fact that IPR-AASTRE utility is maintained over time may be related to the complexity of ICU clinical activity. In this regard, the AASTRE act as a tool that redirects healthcare activity towards essential aspects of care, regardless of the environmental situation. However, in our study six measures showed a significant decrease along the four-month periods analysed, indicating that this tool can also help systematize healthcare and organizational learning. Nevertheless, in the case of measures with a gradually ascending IPR-AASTRE, it should be verified (as occurs in this study with the measure “daily assessment by parenteral nutrition team”) that the lack of adherence to the recommendations can be accounted for by causes from outside the work team implementing AASTRE (a problem of communication with other agents involved in treating the patient, as might occur in this case with professionals of the Pharmacy Service who are responsible for monitoring hospital parenteral nutrition, for example). The AASTRE have proven to be more effective in more serious patients, in the early days of admission and in increased workload environments. These findings are consistent with the data published by our group previously [11]. Without interrupting the work flow, aspects of severe patient care are recalled and their definitive inclusion into treatment is left to the discretion of the senior physician responsible of the patient, according to the indication:risk ratio. The concept of care bundling and its efficacy in improving clinical outcomes are also supported in the literature [34]. Our results show a significant decrease in VAP influencing three of the recommendations established to prevent this type of adverse event (assessment of sedation level, semi-recumbent position and prophylaxis of deep venous thrombosis). Dubose et al. [35] described this effect at a trauma ICU through a checklist of VAP bundle measures. However, in our study, the AASTRE had no impact on mortality and CRB. Probably, to demonstrate an impact on the rate of CRB requires influencing other aspects such as catheter insertion and maintenance [36]. In the critical patient, no study has managed to associate the use of safety checklists with a decrease in mortality [15]. Recently, in a study of Brazilian ICUs [37], the introduction of daily checklists, goal setting and clinician prompting did not decrease in-hospital mortality or other clinical outcomes. Despite being a study with a considerable sample size, some organizational and methodological aspects could render the results unreproducible outside that environment. For example, the health system is not comparable to the European one as regards cultural aspects and the organization of work teams. Moreover, standardized mortality is high and the number of patients recruited in each ICU was relatively low. In addition, important methodological aspects such as the period of analysis (just 4 months in that study), the definition of the measures, the eligibility of the patients and training in the use of the tools are different in the two studies. Nevertheless, the most distinguishing factor between the studies is the role of the prompter. According to the authors of the Brazilian study, the feedback of the clinician with the prompter was carried out later in the day. In our study, this is one of the keys of our methodology, the prompter interacts at the bedside during healthcare activity, immediately after the daily clinical rounds, acting as a catalyser of the transfer of knowledge, thus improving adherence to scientific proof. In any case, we are aware that a single intervention, albeit cross-cutting, never has a definitive impact on patient prognosis. Moreover, using mortality as an outcome measure requires larger samples and risk adjustment for fair comparison among providers and organizations [38]. There are limitations to this study. (1) Only two ICUs have participated. Moreover, their participation in the design of the AASTRE tool, the experience gained by the research team from the pilot study and the development of the culture of the continuous improvement of the quality of care that is underlying in the participating centres may mean that it is not possible to extrapolate the results to other ICUs. (2) The Hawthorne effect, a performance gain resulting from the knowledge of being observed, is difficult to distinguish from those resulting from the intervention. (3) The perception of safety culture was investigated only at one centre. (4) Sample size was not initially calculated to investigate the impact of the AASTRE on mortality or nosocomial infection rates. (5) The study design does not include a control group, since the random selection of the patients evaluated in the safety audits does not allow this. (6) Having demographic data of the patient populations attended to during the study period, of the quantitative evaluation of the Nursing workload and of the incidence of adverse events may have helped establish more precise analysis of the data and of the impact of AASTRE (Additional file 1).

Conclusions

In conclusion, our results suggest that the AASTRE were associated with improved structure, process and outcome indicators. In addition, this tool allows simultaneously translating medical evidence to clinical practice, reducing errors of omission, and also allows assessing quality through process indicators.
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Authors:  M D Cabana; C S Rand; N R Powe; A W Wu; M H Wilson; P A Abboud; H R Rubin
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  1999-10-20       Impact factor: 56.272

2.  What practices will most improve safety? Evidence-based medicine meets patient safety.

Authors:  Lucian L Leape; Donald M Berwick; David W Bates
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2002 Jul 24-31       Impact factor: 56.272

3.  Creating the evidence base for quality improvement collaboratives.

Authors:  Brian S Mittman
Journal:  Ann Intern Med       Date:  2004-06-01       Impact factor: 25.391

4.  Response to: Protocols: help for improvement but beware of regression to the mean and mediocrity.

Authors:  Peter Isherwood
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  2016-01-13       Impact factor: 17.440

5.  Real time patient safety audits: improving safety every day.

Authors:  R Ursprung; J E Gray; W H Edwards; J D Horbar; J Nickerson; P Plsek; P H Shiono; G K Suresh; D A Goldmann
Journal:  Qual Saf Health Care       Date:  2005-08

6.  Measurable outcomes of quality improvement using a daily quality rounds checklist: two-year prospective analysis of sustainability in a surgical intensive care unit.

Authors:  Pedro G R Teixeira; Kenji Inaba; Joseph Dubose; Nicolas Melo; Margarita Bass; Howard Belzberg; Demetrios Demetriades
Journal:  J Trauma Acute Care Surg       Date:  2013-10       Impact factor: 3.313

7.  Audits in real time for safety in critical care: definition and pilot study.

Authors:  G Sirgo Rodríguez; M Olona Cabases; M C Martin Delgado; F Esteban Reboll; A Pobo Peris; M Bodí Saera
Journal:  Med Intensiva       Date:  2014-02-05       Impact factor: 2.491

8.  Prompting physicians to address a daily checklist and process of care and clinical outcomes: a single-site study.

Authors:  Curtis H Weiss; Farzad Moazed; Colleen A McEvoy; Benjamin D Singer; Igal Szleifer; Luís A N Amaral; Mary Kwasny; Charles M Watts; Stephen D Persell; David W Baker; Jacob I Sznajder; Richard G Wunderink
Journal:  Am J Respir Crit Care Med       Date:  2011-05-26       Impact factor: 21.405

9.  Intensive care unit safety culture and outcomes: a US multicenter study.

Authors:  David T Huang; Gilles Clermont; Lan Kong; Lisa A Weissfeld; J Bryan Sexton; Kathy M Rowan; Derek C Angus
Journal:  Int J Qual Health Care       Date:  2010-04-09       Impact factor: 2.038

10.  Protocols and Hospital Mortality in Critically Ill Patients: The United States Critical Illness and Injury Trials Group Critical Illness Outcomes Study.

Authors:  Jonathan E Sevransky; William Checkley; Phabiola Herrera; Brian W Pickering; Juliana Barr; Samuel M Brown; Steven Y Chang; David Chong; David Kaufman; Richard D Fremont; Timothy D Girard; Jeffrey Hoag; Steven B Johnson; Mehta P Kerlin; Janice Liebler; James O'Brien; Terence O'Keefe; Pauline K Park; Stephen M Pastores; Namrata Patil; Anthony P Pietropaoli; Maryann Putman; Todd W Rice; Leo Rotello; Jonathan Siner; Sahul Sajid; David J Murphy; Greg S Martin
Journal:  Crit Care Med       Date:  2015-10       Impact factor: 7.598

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  1 in total

1.  Protocols for the obvious: Where does it start, and stop?

Authors:  Armand R J Girbes; Paul E Marik
Journal:  Ann Intensive Care       Date:  2017-04-14       Impact factor: 6.925

  1 in total

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