| Literature DB >> 28371889 |
Rebecca L Hoffman1, Jason Saucier2, Serena Dasani1, Tara Collins2, Daniel N Holena2, Meghan Fitzpatrick1, Boris Tsypenyuk1, Niels D Martin2.
Abstract
QUALITY PROBLEM: Patients recently discharged from the intensive care unit (ICU) are at high risk for clinical deterioration. INITIAL ASSESSMENT: Unreliable and incomplete handoffs of complex patients contributed to preventable ICU readmissions. Respiratory decompensation was responsible for four times as many readmissions as other causes. CHOICE OF SOLUTION: Form a multidisciplinary team to address care coordination surrounding the transfer of patients from the ICU to the surgical ward. IMPLEMENTATION: A quality improvement intervention incorporating verbal handoffs, time-sensitive patient evaluations and visual cues was piloted over a 1-year period in consecutive high-risk surgical patients discharged from the ICU. Process metrics and clinical outcomes were compared to historical controls. EVALUATION: The intervention brought the primary team and respiratory therapists to the bedside for a baseline examination within 60 min of ward arrival. Stakeholders viewed the intervention as such a valuable adjunct to patient care that the intervention has become a standard of care. While not significant, in a comparatively older and sicker intervention population, the rate of readmissions due to respiratory decompensation was 12.5%, while 35.0% in the control group (P = 0.28). LESSONS LEARNED: The implementation of this ICU transition protocol is feasible and internationally applicable, and results in improved care coordination and communication for a high-risk group of patients.Entities:
Keywords: critical care; handoff; transitions in care
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28371889 PMCID: PMC6281336 DOI: 10.1093/intqhc/mzx032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Qual Health Care ISSN: 1353-4505 Impact factor: 2.038