Cronin Jessica A, Soghier Lamia, Ryan Kara, Shen Christine, Bhattarai Sopnil, Rana Sohel, Shah Rahul, Heitmiller Eugenie
Division of Anesthesiology, Pain and Perioperative Medicine, Children's National Hospital, George Washington University, Washington, D.C.
Division of Neonatology, Children's National Hospital, George Washington University, Washington, D.C.
Pediatr Qual Saf. 2020 Jul 7;5(4):e318. doi: 10.1097/pq9.0000000000000318. eCollection 2020 Jul-Aug.
The association between hypothermia in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) patients and morbidity and mortality is well described. Neonates are at higher risk of perioperative hypothermia when compared to older children. Previous studies showed that quality improvement tools reduced postoperative hypothermia in NICU patients, but none showed sustained improvement at incidence rates of <10%. As a single institution, we aimed to reduce the percentage of postoperative temperatures < 36°C in NICU patients from 10% to 6% over 6 months and sustain for 6 months.
An interdisciplinary team created a key driver diagram and implemented interventions, including monthly reporting of postoperative hypothermia incidence to the anesthesiologists, individual feedback sessions with the anesthesiologists, use of a perioperative checklist, and continuous axillary temperature monitoring of the infant throughout the perioperative period. Data were collected retrospectively using a chart review of electronic medical records. The primary outcome was the percentage of hypothermic patients (T < 36°C) based on the first postoperative temperature taken in the NICU. We tracked this measure using a statistical control chart and evaluated it using Plan-Do-Study-Act cycles.
From February 1, 2016 to May 30, 2018, data were collected for 554 patients (pre-intervention: 242 and post-intervention: 312). The percentage of surgical patients who returned to the NICU hypothermic decreased from 9.7% to 2.5% ( < 0.002)-a change sustained for greater than 12 months.
Quality improvement tools are useful in reducing postoperative hypothermia in NICU surgical patients and in maintaining these results.
新生儿重症监护病房(NICU)患者体温过低与发病率和死亡率之间的关联已得到充分描述。与大龄儿童相比,新生儿围手术期体温过低的风险更高。既往研究表明,质量改进工具可降低NICU患者术后体温过低的发生率,但在发生率低于10%时,均未显示出持续改善。作为一家单一机构,我们旨在在6个月内将NICU患者术后体温<36°C的百分比从10%降至6%,并持续6个月。
一个跨学科团队绘制了关键驱动因素图并实施了干预措施,包括每月向麻醉医生报告术后体温过低的发生率、与麻醉医生进行个人反馈会议、使用围手术期检查表以及在围手术期对婴儿进行持续腋窝温度监测。通过回顾电子病历收集数据。主要结局是根据在NICU测量的首次术后体温计算的体温过低患者(T<36°C)的百分比。我们使用统计控制图跟踪该指标,并使用计划-执行-研究-行动循环对其进行评估。
从2016年2月1日至2018年5月30日,收集了554例患者的数据(干预前:242例,干预后:312例)。返回NICU时体温过低的手术患者百分比从9.7%降至2.5%(<0.002),且这一变化持续了超过12个月。
质量改进工具有助于降低NICU手术患者术后体温过低的发生率,并维持这些结果。