Giuliani Sara, McArthur Alexa, Greenwood John
1 Surgical Specialties, Clinical Dietetics, Royal Adelaide Hospital, Australia2 Joanna Briggs Institute, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Adelaide3 Adult Burn Service, Royal Adelaide Hospital, Australia.
JBI Database System Rev Implement Rep. 2015 Nov;13(11):235-53. doi: 10.11124/jbisrir-2015-2208.
Major burn injury patients commonly fast preoperatively before multiple surgical procedures. The Societies of Anesthesiology in Europe and the United States recommend fasting from clear fluids for two hours and solids for six to eight hours preoperatively. However, at the Royal Adelaide Hospital, patients often fast from midnight proceeding the day of surgery. This project aims to promote evidence-based practice to minimize extended preoperative fasting in major burn patients.
A baseline audit was conducted measuring the percentage compliance with audit criteria, specifically on preoperative fasting documentation and appropriate instructions in line with evidence-based guidelines. Strategies were then implemented to address areas of non-compliance, which included staff education, development of documentation tools and completion of a perioperative feeding protocol for major burn patients. Following this, a post implementation audit assessed the extent of change compared with the baseline audit results.
Education on evidence-based fasting guidelines was delivered to 54% of staff. This resulted in a 19% improvement in compliance with fasting documentation and a 52% increase in adherence to appropriate evidence-based instructions. There was a notable shift from the most common fasting instruction being "fast from midnight" to "fast from 03:00 hours", with an overall four-hour reduction in fasting per theater admission.
These results demonstrate that education improves compliance with documentation and preoperative fasting that is more reflective of evidence-based practice. Collaboration with key stakeholders and a hospital wide fasting protocol is warranted to sustain change and further advance compliance with evidence-based practice at an organizational level.
严重烧伤患者在接受多次外科手术前通常需要术前禁食。欧洲和美国的麻醉学会建议术前禁食清液两小时,禁食固体食物六至八小时。然而,在阿德莱德皇家医院,患者通常从手术日的午夜开始禁食。本项目旨在推广循证实践,以尽量减少严重烧伤患者术前长时间禁食的情况。
进行了一次基线审核,测量符合审核标准的百分比,特别是关于术前禁食记录以及符合循证指南的适当指示。然后实施了一些策略来解决不符合规定的领域,包括员工教育、开发记录工具以及完成严重烧伤患者围手术期喂养方案。在此之后,进行了一次实施后审核,评估与基线审核结果相比的变化程度。
向54%的员工提供了关于循证禁食指南的教育。这使得禁食记录的合规率提高了19%,对适当循证指示的遵守率提高了52%。最常见的禁食指示从“午夜开始禁食”显著转变为“03:00开始禁食”,每个手术室入院患者的禁食时间总体减少了四小时。
这些结果表明,教育可提高记录的合规性以及术前禁食的合规性,使其更符合循证实践。有必要与关键利益相关者合作并制定全院范围的禁食方案,以维持变革并在组织层面进一步提高循证实践的合规性。