Literature DB >> 8790073

Multidisciplinary education for oxygen prescription. A continuous quality improvement study.

D J Cook1, B K Reeve, L E Griffith, F Mookadam, J C Gibson.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To examine the oxygen-prescribing habits and monitoring patterns on a medical teaching ward and to review the literature in this area.
DESIGN: A continuous quality improvement study.
SETTING: A 29-bed medical clinical teaching unit in a 453-bed university-affiliated tertiary care hospital. PATIENTS: We studied 50 consecutive patients who required 79 oxygen treatments.
METHODS: We recorded the indication, prescriber, documentation of prior hypoxemia, method and mode of delivery, oxygenation assessment after initiation, and duration of therapy.
RESULTS: Patients received oxygen for a mean (+/- SD) of 4.7 +/- 4.5 days. Oxygen therapy was ordered on a continuous basis 60.3% of the time. It was ordered by house staff in 54 cases (68%); nurses initiated oxygen therapy in 14 cases (18%) but discontinued it more often than any other health care workers. The most common indications for starting oxygen therapy were dyspnea and tachypnea. In 15 patients (30%), none of the American College of Chest Physicians and National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute criteria for starting oxygen therapy were fulfilled. For 16 patients (32%), arterial blood gas values were measured within 1 hour of oxygen administration; for 29 patients, oximetry was performed. For 9 patients (18%), no testing of adequate oxygenation was performed within 24 hours. Oxygenation status was assessed daily for 23 patients (46%).
CONCLUSIONS: Oxygen prescribing and monitoring practices were suboptimal on our busy medical teaching ward. Practice guidelines based on best available evidence are needed to increase the efficiency of oxygen use. A physiologic, multidisciplinary educational focus on the benefits and hazards of supplemental oxygen is necessary, and randomized trials of such educational interventions should be conducted.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8790073

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Intern Med        ISSN: 0003-9926


  3 in total

Review 1.  Acute oxygen therapy: a review of prescribing and delivery practices.

Authors:  Joyce L Cousins; Peter A B Wark; Vanessa M McDonald
Journal:  Int J Chron Obstruct Pulmon Dis       Date:  2016-05-24

2.  Can we improve the prescribing and delivery of oxygen on a respiratory ward in accordance with new British Thoracic Society oxygen guidelines?

Authors:  Aklak Choudhury; Gregor Young; Beshoy Reyad; Nirali Shah; Radhea Rahman
Journal:  BMJ Open Qual       Date:  2018-10-15

3.  British Thoracic Society Guideline for oxygen use in adults in healthcare and emergency settings.

Authors:  B R O'Driscoll; L S Howard; J Earis; V Mak
Journal:  BMJ Open Respir Res       Date:  2017-05-15
  3 in total

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