| Literature DB >> 29977337 |
Matthew J Bradley1,2, Angela T Kindvall1, Ashley E Humphries1,2, Elliot M Jessie1,2, John S Oh1,2, Debra M Malone1,2, Jeffrey A Bailey1,2, Philip W Perdue1,2, Eric A Elster1,2, Carlos J Rodriguez1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Joint Trauma System has demonstrated improved outcomes through coordinated research and process improvement programs. With fewer combat trauma patients, our military American College of Surgeons level 2 trauma center's ability to maintain a strong trauma Process Improvement (PI) program has become difficult. As emergency general surgery (EGS) patients are similar to trauma patients, our Trauma and Acute Care Surgery (TACS) service developed an EGS PI program analogous to what is done in trauma. We describe the implementation of our novel EGS PI program and its effect on institutional PI proficiency.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29977337 PMCID: PMC6011594 DOI: 10.1186/s13037-018-0167-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient Saf Surg ISSN: 1754-9493
Inclusion criteria for emergency general surgery patients admitted to the TACS service
| Common Clinical Diagnoses | |
|---|---|
| Gastrointestinal: Abdominal compartment syndrome, abdominal pain, anorectal abscess and fistula, appendicitis, cholecystitis, choledocholithiasis, colitis, diverticulitis, gastrointestinal bleed, hemoperitoneum (non-traumatic), hemorrhoids, intestinal obstructions, intraabdominal and retroperitoneal abscesses, liver abscess, mesenteric ischemia, pancreatitis, peritonitis, ulcer disease. | |
| Incarcerated or strangulated Hernias: Femoral, incisional, inguinal, paraesophageal and diaphragmatic umbilical, ventral. | |
| Skin and soft tissue: Abscess, cellulitis, compartment syndrome, fasciitis, necrotizing soft tissue infections, pressure ulcers. | |
| Other: Sepsis, shock, surgical airway |
Emergency general surgery process improvement events
| Filter | Filter |
|---|---|
| Superficial SSI | Non-therapeutic Ex-lap |
| Deep SSI | Transfusions |
| Organ Space | Graft/Prosthetic/Flap Failure |
| Wound Disruption | DVT/Thrombophlebitis |
| Pneumonia | Sepsis |
| Unplanned Intubation | Septic Shock |
| Pulmonary Embolus | Re-admit with/in 30 days |
| Ventilator > 48 h | Anastomotic Leak |
| Renal Failure (Progressive) | Death |
| Acute Renal Failure | Pressure Ulcer |
| UTI | Blood Bank / Lab Issues |
| CVA/Stroke | Radiology Issues |
| Coma > 48 h | Unplanned ICU admit |
| Peripheral Nerve Injury | Unplanned Intervention |
| RRT | Returned to OR |
| Cardiac Arrest | Documentation |
| Myocardial Infarction | Delay in Diagnosis |
| Incidental Findings | Interfacility Event |
| Patient Safety | Missed Diagnosis |
| Positive Cultures |
Fig. 1Trauma Admissions: Trend of trauma patient admissions and distribution of Battle versus Non-Battle Injuries since 2010
Fig. 2Admissions and PI events over time: Comparison of yearly trauma versus trauma plus acute care surgery patient admissions and trends of PI events. Orange line indicates PI volume contributed by trauma patients in 2016. (PI- Process Improvement)
Fig. 3ACS and trauma PI events in 2016: 665 total trauma patients and 298 total PI events. Top four combined PI events are displayed. (ACS- Acute Care Surgery, PI- Process Improvement)