University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Br J Anaesth. 2020 Jul;125(1):e104-e118. doi: 10.1016/j.bja.2020.04.054. Epub 2020 May 23.
There is growing recognition of the need for a coordinated, systematic approach to caring for patients with a tracheostomy. Tracheostomy-related adverse events remain a pervasive global problem, accounting for half of all airway-related deaths and hypoxic brain damage in critical care units. The Global Tracheostomy Collaborative (GTC) was formed in 2012 to improve patient safety and quality of care, emphasising knowledge, skills, teamwork, and patient-centred approaches. Inspired by quality improvement leads in Australia, the UK, and the USA, the GTC implements and disseminates best practices across hospitals and healthcare trusts. Its database collects patient-level information on quality, safety, and organisational efficiencies. The GTC provides an organising structure for quality improvement efforts, promoting safety of paediatric and adult patients. Successful implementation requires instituting key drivers for change that include effective training for health professionals; multidisciplinary team collaboration; engagement and involvement of patients, their families, and carers; and data collection that allows tracking of outcomes. We report the history of the collaborative, its database infrastructure and analytics, and patient outcomes from more than 6500 patients globally. We characterise this patient population for the first time at such scale, reporting predictors of adverse events, mortality, and length of stay indexed to patient characteristics, co-morbidities, risk factors, and context. In one example, the database allowed identification of a previously unrecognised association between bleeding and mortality, reflecting ability to uncover latent risks and promote safety. The GTC provides the foundation for future risk-adjusted benchmarking and a learning community that drives ongoing quality improvement efforts worldwide.
人们越来越认识到,需要采取协调、系统的方法来照顾气管切开术患者。气管切开术相关不良事件仍然是一个普遍存在的全球性问题,占重症监护病房所有气道相关死亡和缺氧性脑损伤的一半。全球气管切开协作组织(GTC)成立于 2012 年,旨在提高患者安全性和护理质量,强调知识、技能、团队合作和以患者为中心的方法。受澳大利亚、英国和美国质量改进领导者的启发,GTC 在医院和医疗信托机构中实施和传播最佳实践。其数据库收集有关质量、安全和组织效率的患者水平信息。GTC 为质量改进工作提供了组织架构,促进了儿科和成年患者的安全。成功实施需要实施变革的关键驱动因素,包括对卫生专业人员进行有效培训;多学科团队合作;让患者、他们的家人和照顾者参与和投入;以及收集数据以跟踪结果。我们报告了协作的历史、其数据库基础设施和分析,以及来自全球 6500 多名患者的患者结果。我们首次在如此大的规模上对这一患者群体进行了特征描述,报告了与患者特征、合并症、风险因素和背景相关的不良事件、死亡率和住院时间的预测因素。例如,该数据库允许识别出血与死亡率之间以前未被认识到的关联,反映了发现潜在风险和促进安全性的能力。GTC 为未来的风险调整基准测试和学习社区提供了基础,该社区推动了全球范围内的持续质量改进工作。