Kumar Shankar, McKean Andrew R, Ramwell Andrew, Johnston Carolyn, Leaver Susannah
Academic Foundation Year 1 Doctor, General Intensive Care Unit, St George's University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, London.
Foundation Year 1 Doctor, General Intensive Care Unit, St George's University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, London SW17 0QT.
Br J Hosp Med (Lond). 2017 Jan 2;78(1):12-15. doi: 10.12968/hmed.2017.78.1.12.
Comprehensive handover of patients transferred from operating theatre to the intensive care unit is crucial in ensuring ongoing quality and safety of care. Handover in this setting poses unique challenges, yet few studies have considered or tested approaches to improve the process. A quality improvement project was undertaken to assess and improve the quality of information transfer during the handover of postoperative patients to the general intensive care unit at a tertiary centre.
This quality improvement project considered all postoperative patients aged 18 years and over, using the plan-do-study-act (PDSA) approach, over a 3-month period in 2015. Baseline audit encompassing intraoperative details (allergies, grade of intubation, estimated blood loss, difficulties and complications) and the postoperative plan (analgesia, thromboprophylaxis, antibiotics and their proposed duration and nutrition) was undertaken to define the extent of the clinical problem. Changes were implemented over two cycles, centred around a novel checklist, and the transfer of information was re-audited after each cycle.
Baseline audit (n=30) revealed a need for improvement across all domains. In PDSA cycle 1, a novel checklist was introduced which led to global improvement across all areas with performance exceeding 70% in all but three out of nine domains (n=33). Engaging key stakeholders (PDSA cycle 2) resulted in overall improvement from baseline but decreased performance in just under half of domains in comparison to PDSA cycle 1 (n=31).
Successful implementation of a series of simple interventions resulted in more effective handover of postoperative patients admitted to an intensive care unit. Sustained long-term improvement is a major challenge and can only be achieved with the global engagement of all staff and incorporation of changes into routine clinical practice.
将患者从手术室转至重症监护病房时进行全面的交接,对于确保持续的医疗质量和安全至关重要。在这种情况下的交接带来了独特的挑战,但很少有研究考虑或测试改善这一过程的方法。开展了一项质量改进项目,以评估并提高在一家三级中心将术后患者交接至综合重症监护病房期间信息传递的质量。
该质量改进项目纳入了所有18岁及以上的术后患者,于2015年采用计划-实施-研究-改进(PDSA)方法,为期3个月。进行了基线审核,涵盖术中细节(过敏情况、插管分级、估计失血量、困难和并发症)以及术后计划(镇痛、血栓预防、抗生素及其建议使用时长和营养),以明确临床问题的严重程度。围绕一份新颖的检查表在两个周期内实施了变革,每个周期后重新审核信息传递情况。
基线审核(n = 30)显示所有领域都需要改进。在PDSA周期1中,引入了一份新颖的检查表,这使得所有领域都得到了全面改善,除九个领域中的三个外,其他所有领域的表现均超过了70%(n = 33)。让关键利益相关者参与进来(PDSA周期2),与基线相比总体有所改善,但与PDSA周期1相比,近半数领域的表现有所下降(n = 31)。
成功实施一系列简单干预措施,使术后入住重症监护病房患者的交接更为有效。持续的长期改进是一项重大挑战,只有全体工作人员全面参与并将变革纳入常规临床实践才能实现。