| Literature DB >> 30555931 |
Lynne Sykes1, Smeeta Sinha2, Janet Hegarty2, Emma Flanagan3, Liam Doyle4, Chedia Hoolickin4, Lewis Edwards4, Paul Ferris5, Elizabeth Lamerton6, Dimitrios Poulikakos2, Darren Green1, Robert Nipah7.
Abstract
Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a common syndrome that is associated with significant mortality and cost. The Quality Improvement AKI Collaborative at Salford Royal Foundation Trust was established to review and improve both the recognition and management of AKI. This was a whole-system intervention to tackle AKI implemented as an alternative to employing separate AKI nurses. Our aims were to reduce the overall incidence of AKI by 10%, to reduce hospital-acquired AKI by 25% and to reduce the progression of AKI from stage 1 to stage 2 or 3 by 50%. From 2014 to 2016, several multifaceted changes were introduced. These included system changes, such as inserting an e-alert for AKI into the electronic patient record, an online educational package and face-to-face teaching for AKI, and AKI addition to daily safety huddles. On 10 Collaborative wards, development of an AKI care bundle via multidisciplinary team (MDT) plan, do, study, act testing occurred. Results showed a 15.6% reduction in hospital-wide-acquired AKI, with a 22.3% reduction on the collaborative wards. Trust-wide rates of progression of AKI 1 to AKI 2 or 3 showed normal variation, whereas there was a 48.5% reduction in AKI progression on the Collaborative wards. This implies that e-alerts were ineffective in isolation. The Collaborative wards' results were a product of the educational support, bundle and heightened awareness of AKI. A number of acute hospitals have demonstrated impactful successes in AKI reduction centred on a dedicated AKI nurse model plus e-alerting with supporting changes. This project adds value by highlighting another approach that does not require a new post with attendant rolling costs and risks. We believe that our approach increased our efficacy in acute care in our front-line teams by concentrating on embedding improved recognition and actions across the MDT.Entities:
Keywords: collaborative, breakthrough groups; continuous quality improvement; control charts/run charts; healthcare quality improvement; quality improvement
Year: 2018 PMID: 30555931 PMCID: PMC6267307 DOI: 10.1136/bmjoq-2017-000308
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open Qual ISSN: 2399-6641
Learning sessions and dates
| Learning session 1 | 17 August 2015 |
| Learning session 2 | 10 November 2015 |
| Learning session 3 | 10 March 2016 |
| Learning session 4 | 8 June 2016 |
| Learning session 5 | 3 October 2016 |
Ward abbreviation and specialty
| Ward | Specialty |
| ANU | Acute neurology unit |
| B1 | General surgical |
| B6 | Orthopaedic/trauma ward |
| B8 | Neurosurgery ward |
| EAU | Emergency assessment unit |
| H2 | Respiratory ward |
| HCU | Heart care unit |
| L2 | Gastroenterology ward |
| L5 | Care of the elderly ward |
| SHDU | Surgical high dependency unit |
| Pharmacy team |
Figure 1Driver diagram to show the aims and work streams for the acute kidney injury (AKI) collaborative.
Figure 2Acute kidney injury (AKI) bundle poster.
Figure 3Number of episodes of acute kidney injury (AKI) by stage per month.
Figure 4Number of episodes of hospital-acquired acute kidney injury (AKI) by month. There was a 16% reduction in hospital-acquired AKI compared with baseline.
Figure 5Number of episodes of hospital-acquired acute kidney injury (AKI) by month on the collaborative wards only. There was a 22% decrease in episodes of hospital acquired AKI compared with baseline.
Figure 6Number of acute kidney injury (AKI) stage 1 progressing to either AKI stage 2 or 3, 48 hours after admission, by month. This figure shows normal variation.
Figure 7Number of acute kidney injury (AKI) stage 1 progressing to either AKI stage 2 or 3 on the collaborative wards only, 48 hours after admission, by month. This shows a 48% reduction in episodes on the collaborative wards compared with baseline.