Literature DB >> 33517078

Low compliance to a vital sign safety protocol on general hospital wards: A retrospective cohort study.

Yassin Eddahchouri1, Mats Koeneman2, Manon Plokker3, Egbert Brouwer4, Tom H van de Belt5, Harry van Goor6, Sebastian Jh Bredie3.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Periodic vital sign monitoring is commonly used to detect clinical deterioration. Incomplete assessment of Early Warning Score (EWS) and poor protocol compliance may negatively impact nurses' responsiveness to critical situations.
OBJECTIVE: This study assesses the quality of recorded EWSs and the degree of overall protocol compliance and protocol compliance in adverse event patients, in a centre that is an early adopter of an EWS safety protocol.
DESIGN: Retrospective single-centre cohort study.
SETTING: General hospital wards of a tertiary referral university medical centre. PARTICIPANTS: 48,864 patients admitted to general wards between 2015 and 2018.
METHODS: Vital sign and Modified EWS (MEWS) data were collected from the electronic health record. MEWS completeness was evaluated by determining the proportion of missing values for each vital sign. To evaluate protocol compliance, we assessed whether the elapsed time between consecutive MEWSs was within the protocollary time as dictated by the MEWS protocol. Outcome measures were overall MEWS completeness, and both overall protocol compliance and protocol compliance specifically in the 24 h before adverse events.
RESULTS: All required items to calculate a MEWS were present in 76 percent of the 1,663,743 vital sign measurements. Overall protocol compliance was 62 percent. For the low, mid-range and high MEWS groups, protocol compliances were 67, 47 and 30 percent, respectively. Time-to-next-MEWS exceeded protocol-recommended timing by up to 9 h for a substantial amount of MEWSs in the mid- and high-range MEWS groups. In patients with adverse events, compliance to the MEWS protocol during the 24 h prior to the events was 66 percent in aggregate, ranging from 80% in low MEWS groups, 74% in the mid-range, and 49% in the high MEWS groups. In the high MEWS group, improvements in protocol compliance were primarily noted in five hours immediately preceding the event.
CONCLUSIONS: EWS assessments were incomplete in one-quarter of measurements. Compliance to a MEWS safety protocol was generally low, specifically when the protocol mandated more frequent MEWS assessments. Although more MEWSs were recorded in patients with adverse events, the increase in vital sign measurements' frequency mostly occurred shortly before the event manifested. This finding suggests missed opportunities to detect clinical deterioration.
Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Early warning score; Guideline adherence; Hospital rapid response Team; Nursing assessment; Patient safety; Vital signs

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 33517078     DOI: 10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2020.103849

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Nurs Stud        ISSN: 0020-7489            Impact factor:   5.837


  2 in total

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Authors:  Frederic Michard; Robert H Thiele; Morgan Le Guen
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2.  Effect of a Wireless Vital Sign Monitoring System on the Rapid Response System in the General Ward.

Authors:  Won Ho Han; Dae Kyung Sohn; Yul Hwangbo; Hee Jung Park; Mijung Kim; Yoona Choi; Il Won Shin; Jung Min Lee; Heungki Jeon; Ki Chung Ryu; Taesik Yoon; Jee Hee Kim
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