Medical Assessment Unit, Portsmouth Hospitals NHS Trust, Portsmouth, Hampshire, UK.
TEAMS centre, Portsmouth Hospitals NHS Trust, Portsmouth, Hampshire, UK.
BMJ Qual Saf. 2015 Jan;24(1):10-20. doi: 10.1136/bmjqs-2014-003073. Epub 2014 Sep 23.
Avoidable hospital mortality is often attributable to inadequate patient vital signs monitoring, and failure to recognise or respond to clinical deterioration. The processes involved with vital sign collection and charting; their integration, interpretation and analysis; and the delivery of decision support regarding subsequent clinical care are subject to potential error and/or failure.
To determine whether introducing an electronic physiological surveillance system (EPSS), specifically designed to improve the collection and clinical use of vital signs data, reduced hospital mortality.
A pragmatic, retrospective, observational study of seasonally adjusted in-hospital mortality rates in three main hospital specialties was undertaken before, during and after the sequential deployment and ongoing use of a hospital-wide EPSS in two large unconnected acute general hospitals in England. The EPSS, which uses wireless handheld computing devices, replaced a paper-based vital sign charting and clinical escalation system.
During EPSS implementation, crude mortality fell from a baseline of 7.75% (2168/27,959) to 6.42% (1904/29,676) in one hospital (estimated 397 fewer deaths), and from 7.57% (1648/21,771) to 6.15% (1614/26,241) at the second (estimated 372 fewer deaths). At both hospitals, multiyear statistical process control analyses revealed abrupt and sustained mortality reductions, coincident with the deployment and increasing use of the system. The cumulative total of excess deaths reduced in all specialties with increasing use of the system across the hospital.
The use of technology specifically designed to improve the accuracy, reliability and availability of patients' vital signs and early warning scores, and thereby the recognition of and response to patient deterioration, is associated with reduced mortality in this study.
可避免的医院死亡率通常归因于对患者生命体征监测的不足,以及未能识别或对临床恶化作出反应。涉及生命体征采集和图表记录的过程;其整合、解释和分析;以及提供关于后续临床护理的决策支持,都可能存在潜在的错误和/或失败。
确定引入专门设计用于提高生命体征数据采集和临床使用的电子生理监测系统(EPSS)是否降低了医院死亡率。
在英格兰的两家大型非关联急症总医院中,先后部署和持续使用一种全医院范围的 EPSS 前后,进行了一项关于三个主要医院专科季节性调整住院死亡率的实用、回顾性、观察性研究。EPSS 使用无线手持计算设备,取代了纸质生命体征图表记录和临床升级系统。
在 EPSS 实施期间,一家医院的粗死亡率从基线的 7.75%(2168/27959)降至 6.42%(1904/29676)(估计减少 397 例死亡),另一家医院从 7.57%(1648/21771)降至 6.15%(1614/26241)(估计减少 372 例死亡)。在这两家医院,多年的统计过程控制分析显示,死亡率突然且持续下降,与系统的部署和使用增加相一致。随着系统在医院的使用增加,所有专科的超额死亡人数都在减少。
在这项研究中,使用专门设计用于提高患者生命体征和早期预警评分的准确性、可靠性和可用性的技术,从而识别和应对患者恶化,与死亡率降低相关。