Thornton Victoria L, Holl Jane L, Cline David M, Freiermuth Caroline E, Sullivan Dori T, Tanabe Paula
Duke University School of Medicine, Duke Medical Center, Department of Surgery, Division of Emergency Medicine, Durham, North Carolina ; Duke School of Nursing, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina.
Northwestern University, Feinberg School of Medicine, Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois.
West J Emerg Med. 2014 Jul;15(4):446-58. doi: 10.5811/westjem.2014.4.20489.
Patients with sickle cell disease (SCD) often seek care in emergency departments (EDs) for severe pain. However, there is evidence that they experience inaccurate assessment, suboptimal care, and inadequate follow-up referrals. The aim of this project was to 1) explore the feasibility of applying a failure modes, effects and criticality analysis (FMECA) in two EDs examining four processes of care (triage, analgesic management, high risk/high users, and referrals made) for patients with SCD, and 2) report the failures of these care processes in each ED.
A FMECA was conducted of ED SCD patient care at two hospitals. A multidisciplinary group examined each step of four processes. Providers identified failures in each step, and then characterized the frequency, impact, and safeguards, resulting in risk categorization.
Many "high risk" failures existed in both institutions, including a lack of recognition of high-risk or high-user patients and a lack of emphasis on psychosocial referrals. Specific to SCD analgesic management, one setting inconsistently used existing analgesic policies, while the other setting did not have such policies.
FMECA facilitated the identification of failures of ED SCD care and has guided quality improvement activities. Interventions can focus on improvements in these specific areas targeting improvements in the delivery and organization of ED SCD care. Improvements should correspond with the forthcoming National Heart, Lung and Blood-sponsored guidelines for treatment of patients with sickle cell disease.
镰状细胞病(SCD)患者常因剧痛前往急诊科(ED)就诊。然而,有证据表明他们在就诊时经历了不准确的评估、不优化的治疗以及后续转诊不足的情况。本项目的目的是:1)探讨在两家急诊科应用失效模式、效应及关键性分析(FMECA)来检查针对SCD患者的四个护理流程(分诊、镇痛管理、高风险/高使用频率患者管理及转诊)的可行性;2)报告每家急诊科这些护理流程中的失误情况。
对两家医院急诊科的SCD患者护理进行FMECA分析。一个多学科小组检查了四个流程的每一步骤。医护人员识别出每个步骤中的失误,然后对发生频率、影响及防护措施进行了描述,从而得出风险分类。
两家机构均存在许多“高风险”失误,包括对高风险或高使用频率患者缺乏识别,以及对社会心理转诊缺乏重视。具体到SCD镇痛管理,一家机构未始终遵循现有的镇痛政策,而另一家机构则没有此类政策。
FMECA有助于识别急诊科SCD护理中的失误,并为质量改进活动提供了指导。干预措施可聚焦于这些特定领域的改进,目标是改善急诊科SCD护理的提供与组织。改进措施应与即将出台的由国家心肺血液研究所资助的镰状细胞病患者治疗指南相一致。