| Literature DB >> 29779398 |
Carmen E Gonzalez1, Norman Brito-Dellan1, Srinivas R Banala1,2, David Rubio1, Mohamed Ait Aiss1, Terry W Rice1, Karen Chen1, Diane C Bodurka1, Carmelita P Escalante1.
Abstract
Communication failures during patient handoff can lead to serious errors. A quality improvement team created a standardized handoff tool/process (DE-PASS: Decisive problem requiring admission, Evaluation time, Patient summary, Acute issues/action list, Situation unfinished/awareness, Signed out to) for admitting patients from the emergency department (ED) to the hospitalist inpatient service of a tertiary cancer center. DE-PASS mirrors the institution's ED workflow, stratifies patients as stable/urgent/emergent, and establishes requirements for verbal and email communications between providers. Comparison of preintervention and postintervention results from the 1-month pilot revealed that within a 24-hour period, DE-PASS reduced the number of intensive care unit transfers by 58% ( P = .393), the number of rapid-response team calls by 39% ( P = .637), and time to inpatient order by 31% ( P = .004). ED physicians' and hospitalists' satisfaction with DE-PASS increased. Reduction in intensive care unit transfers was sustained after the pilot ( P = .029). DE-PASS feasibility was evidenced by 100% uptake. By stratifying patients by risk level, DE-PASS reduced admission-to-evaluation times for unstable patients, potentially improving patient safety.Entities:
Keywords: communications; emergency department; hospitalist; nocturnalist; patient handoff
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29779398 DOI: 10.1177/1062860618776096
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Med Qual ISSN: 1062-8606 Impact factor: 1.852