| Literature DB >> 35016638 |
Gladis Kabil1,2, Steven A Frost3,4,5, Deborah Hatcher3, Amith Shetty6,7, Jann Foster3, Stephen McNally3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Early intravenous fluids for patients with sepsis presenting with hypoperfusion or shock in the emergency department remains one of the key recommendations of the Surviving Sepsis Campaign guidelines to reduce mortality. However, compliance with the recommendation remains poor. While several interventions have been implemented to improve early fluid administration as part of sepsis protocols, the extent to which they have improved compliance with fluid resuscitation is unknown. The factors associated with the lack of compliance are also poorly understood.Entities:
Keywords: Barriers; Compliance; Facilitators; Fluid therapy; Sepsis
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35016638 PMCID: PMC8753824 DOI: 10.1186/s12873-021-00558-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Emerg Med ISSN: 1471-227X
Data Extraction Information for Studies included in the Meta-analysis
| S. No | Information |
|---|---|
| 1 | Author |
| 2 | Year of publication |
| 3 | Study design |
| 4 | Emergency department type |
| 5 | Number of patients enrolled in the control group |
| 6 | Number of patients in the intervention group |
| 7 | Number compliant with early intravenous fluid bolus in control group |
| 8 | Number complaint with early intravenous fluid bolus in intervention group |
| 9 | Time to administration of first fluid bolus in control group |
| 10 | Time to administration of first fluid bolus in intervention group |
| 11 | Volume of fluids received by patients in control group |
| 12 | Volume of fluids received by patients in intervention group |
| 13 | Whether or not the studied intervention had any improvement in compliance with time and volume of initial fluid bolus administered |
| 14 | Number of interventions implemented |
Narrative Synthesis with description of factors influencing early initiation of fluid bolus in sepsis
| Study Name | Sample size (n) | Facilitators | Barriers identified | Compliance Rate | Factors that had no influence | Recommendations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baldwin (2008) [ | 32 | Near patient lactate testing | Underestimating the severity of sepsis; incomplete triage data hindering prompt diagnosis; first assessment done by very junior doctors. | 53% | 100% completion of triage vital signs; review by middle grade doctors within first 30 min; training nurses and doctors. | |
| Kang (2012) [ | 317 | Care by board-certified emergency physicians; nurses with > 3 yrs. experience | Patients with cryptic shock, higher serum lactate levels or without hyperthermia; care by junior resident doctors | 256 (80.8%) | Overcrowding; sex- based differences of the treating physician | Interventions focussing on the identified barriers |
| Shin (2012) | 770 | ED overcrowding | 81.9% | Multidisciplinary response team; effective bed management | ||
| Gray (2013) [ | 626 | Difficulty recognising sepsis; clinical reliance on development of hypotension | 48% | Pre-hospital sepsis screening criteria | ||
| Wang (2013) [ | 195 | Survey response to why IV fluid challenge was not achieved: 41% unsure; 59% didn’t think it was needed. Knowledge, attitude and behavioural barriers. | 27% (Control group) | |||
| Faine (2015) [ | 193 | Interhospital transfers from regional hospitals; inadequacy of emergency trained physicians in rural hospitals; clinical deterioration of patient during transfer. | 54% (Patients transferred from regional hospitals) | Use of telemedicine | ||
| De Groot (2017) [ | 1732 | Treatment commenced in ED patients in earlier stages of sepsis | Emphasis on treatment in patients with and without organ failure in sepsis | |||
| Gaieski (2017) [ | 2913 | Time of presentation of patients to ED (between 07:00–19:00 less likely to receive fluids within 1 h compared to presenting after-hours); overcrowding, increased occupancy rate and patient hours in ED | Appropriate staffing and patient flow in ED | |||
| Morr (2017) [ | 487 | Correctness of exact classification of sepsis- SIRS, severe sepsis, recognised or unrecognised sepsis | ||||
| Le Conte (2017) [ | 130 | Advanced age; cardiac co-morbidities; delay in sepsis recognition; ED overcrowding; | 25 (19%) received fluid challenge, Mean time to administration: 10 ± 27 min | Multidisciplinary quality improvement programme with simple guidelines, electronic alerts; qSOFA score measurement | ||
| Deis (2018) [ | 5631 | Patients without an ICD sepsis diagnosis code despite similar baseline organ dysfunction | 10.6% for patients without a sepsis diagnosis code; 19.6% for patients with a diagnosis code | Education and quality improvement outcomes |
Fig. 1PRISMA flowchart of study inclusion
Fig. 2Association between intervention and compliance with early initiation of intravenous fluid bolus
Fig. 3Association between intervention and time of initiation of first intravenous fluid bolus administration
Fig. 4Association between intervention and volume of fluids administered within the protocol recommended time