Yadlapati Rena, Johnston Elyse R, Gluskin Adam B, Gregory Dyanna L, Cyrus Rachel, Werth Lindsay, Ciolino Jody D, Grande David P, Keswani Rajesh N
Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL.
University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, PA.
J Clin Gastroenterol. 2018 Sep;52(8):709-714. doi: 10.1097/MCG.0000000000000849.
BACKGROUND/GOALS: Inpatient colonoscopy preparations are often inadequate, compromising patient safety and procedure quality, while resulting in greater hospital costs. The aims of this study were to: (1) design and implement an electronic inpatient split-dose bowel preparation order set; (2) assess the intervention's impact upon preparation adequacy, repeated colonoscopies, hospital days, and costs.
We conducted a single center prospective pragmatic quasiexperimental study of hospitalized adults undergoing colonoscopy. The experimental intervention was designed using DMAIC (define, measure, analyze, improve, and control) methodology. Prospective data collected over 12 months were compared with data from a historical preintervention cohort. The primary outcome was bowel preparation quality and secondary outcomes included number of repeated procedures, hospital days, and costs.
On the basis of a Delphi method and DMAIC process, we created an electronic inpatient bowel preparation order set inclusive of a split-dose bowel preparation algorithm, automated orders for rescue medications, and nursing bowel preparation checks. The analysis data set included 969 patients, 445 (46%) in the postintervention group. The adequacy of bowel preparation significantly increased following intervention (86% vs. 43%; P<0.01) and proportion of repeated procedures decreased (2.0% vs. 4.6%; P=0.03). Mean hospital days from bowel preparation initiation to discharge decreased from 8.0 to 6.9 days (P=0.02). The intervention resulted in an estimated 1-year cost-savings of $46,076 based on a reduction in excess hospital days associated with repeated and delayed procedures.
Our interdisciplinary initiative targeting inpatient colonoscopy preparations significantly improved quality and reduced repeat procedures, and hospital days. Other institutions should consider utilizing this framework to improve inpatient colonoscopy value.
背景/目标:住院患者结肠镜检查的肠道准备往往不充分,这会危及患者安全和检查质量,同时增加医院成本。本研究的目的是:(1)设计并实施一份电子住院患者分剂量肠道准备医嘱集;(2)评估该干预措施对准备充分性、重复结肠镜检查、住院天数和成本的影响。
我们对接受结肠镜检查的住院成人进行了一项单中心前瞻性实用类准实验研究。实验性干预措施采用DMAIC(定义、测量、分析、改进和控制)方法设计。将12个月内收集的前瞻性数据与干预前历史队列的数据进行比较。主要结局是肠道准备质量,次要结局包括重复检查次数、住院天数和成本。
基于德尔菲法和DMAIC流程,我们创建了一份电子住院患者肠道准备医嘱集,其中包括分剂量肠道准备算法、急救药物自动医嘱和护理肠道准备检查。分析数据集包括969例患者,干预后组445例(46%)。干预后肠道准备的充分性显著提高(86%对43%;P<0.01),重复检查的比例降低(2.0%对4.6%;P=0.03)。从开始肠道准备到出院的平均住院天数从8.0天降至6.9天(P=0.02)。基于与重复和延迟检查相关的多余住院天数减少,该干预措施估计每年节省成本46,076美元。
我们针对住院患者结肠镜检查肠道准备的跨学科举措显著提高了质量,减少了重复检查和住院天数。其他机构应考虑利用这一框架来提高住院患者结肠镜检查的价值。