| Literature DB >> 32456776 |
Michael J Brenner1, Vinciya Pandian2, Carly E Milliren3, Dionne A Graham3, Charissa Zaga4, Linda L Morris5, Joshua R Bedwell6, Preety Das4, Hannah Zhu7, John Lee Y Allen8, Alon Peltz9, Kimberly Chin3, Bradley A Schiff10, Diane M Randall11, Chloe Swords12, Darrin French13, Erin Ward3, Joanne M Sweeney4, Stephen J Warrillow4, Asit Arora7, Anthony Narula14, Brendan A McGrath15, Tanis S Cameron4, David W Roberson16.
Abstract
There is growing recognition of the need for a coordinated, systematic approach to caring for patients with a tracheostomy. Tracheostomy-related adverse events remain a pervasive global problem, accounting for half of all airway-related deaths and hypoxic brain damage in critical care units. The Global Tracheostomy Collaborative (GTC) was formed in 2012 to improve patient safety and quality of care, emphasising knowledge, skills, teamwork, and patient-centred approaches. Inspired by quality improvement leads in Australia, the UK, and the USA, the GTC implements and disseminates best practices across hospitals and healthcare trusts. Its database collects patient-level information on quality, safety, and organisational efficiencies. The GTC provides an organising structure for quality improvement efforts, promoting safety of paediatric and adult patients. Successful implementation requires instituting key drivers for change that include effective training for health professionals; multidisciplinary team collaboration; engagement and involvement of patients, their families, and carers; and data collection that allows tracking of outcomes. We report the history of the collaborative, its database infrastructure and analytics, and patient outcomes from more than 6500 patients globally. We characterise this patient population for the first time at such scale, reporting predictors of adverse events, mortality, and length of stay indexed to patient characteristics, co-morbidities, risk factors, and context. In one example, the database allowed identification of a previously unrecognised association between bleeding and mortality, reflecting ability to uncover latent risks and promote safety. The GTC provides the foundation for future risk-adjusted benchmarking and a learning community that drives ongoing quality improvement efforts worldwide.Entities:
Keywords: adverse events; length of stay; patient safety; quality improvement; standardised care; tracheostomy
Year: 2020 PMID: 32456776 DOI: 10.1016/j.bja.2020.04.054
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Anaesth ISSN: 0007-0912 Impact factor: 9.166