Vandegrift Mary Anne, Granata Robert, Totten Vicken Y, Kellett John, Sebat Frank
Department of Research, Kaweah Delta Health Care District, Visalia, CA.
Emergency Medicine Department, Santa Anna, CA.
Crit Care Explor. 2021 Aug 10;3(8):e0448. doi: 10.1097/CCE.0000000000000448. eCollection 2021 Aug.
Rapid response systems are still in development, and their practices vary significantly from hospital to hospital. Although the literature supports their value and a four-arm structure, it is unclear within these arms (efferent, afferent, quality assurance, administrative arms) which processes and procedures are responsible for their efficacy. This article reports the evolution of a rapid response system over many years at four institutions and considers the key elements that likely contribute to its efficacy.
Retrospective evaluation of the processes, procedures, and outcomes of an adult general-ward rapid response system as it evolved, at four nonaffiliated community medical centers, spanning 2 decades of development and refinement. System and patient outcomes examined included the number of rapid response system activations/1,000 admissions, time to rapid response system activation and/or interventions, cardiac arrest rate, and/or hospital mortality over time.
In the three hospitals that collected control and intervention data, there was significant increase in earlier and total number of rapid response system activations, more rapid administration of protocolized interventions, and associated decreases in cardiac arrest rate and hospital mortality of the respective population. In all four institutions three important common rapid response system processes were identified: early identification of at-risk patient using a novel focused bedside-assessment tool, leading to classification of the pathophysiologic process, linked to goal-directed intervention protocols.
Our review of a rapid response system that evolved over 20 years across four unrelated institutions revealed a common care pathway that coupled a focused bedside at-risk patient assessment leading to pathophysiologic classification of the patients decline linked to goal-directed intervention protocols. We speculate that the improved outcomes observed are a consequence of effective implementation and coupling of these three processes, as they are important in identifying and treating early the signs of tissue hypoxia and hypoperfusion, which remain the basic pathophysiologic threats of acute deterioration.
快速反应系统仍在发展中,其做法在不同医院之间差异很大。尽管文献支持其价值和四臂结构,但在这些臂(传出臂、传入臂、质量保证臂、行政臂)中,尚不清楚哪些流程和程序对其有效性负责。本文报告了四个机构多年来快速反应系统的演变情况,并考虑了可能有助于其有效性的关键要素。
对四个非附属社区医疗中心成人普通病房快速反应系统在20年发展和完善过程中的流程、程序及结果进行回顾性评估。检查的系统和患者结果包括快速反应系统激活次数/每1000例入院患者、快速反应系统激活和/或干预的时间、心脏骤停率和/或随时间变化的医院死亡率。
在收集了对照和干预数据的三家医院中,快速反应系统激活的早期次数和总数显著增加,标准化干预措施的给药速度加快,相应人群的心脏骤停率和医院死亡率下降。在所有四个机构中,确定了三个重要的常见快速反应系统流程:使用一种新颖的重点床边评估工具早期识别高危患者,从而对病理生理过程进行分类,并与目标导向的干预方案相联系。
我们对四个不相关机构中历经20年发展的快速反应系统进行的回顾揭示了一条共同的护理路径,该路径将重点床边高危患者评估与患者病情的病理生理分类相结合,并与目标导向的干预方案相联系。我们推测,观察到的结果改善是这三个流程有效实施和结合的结果,因为它们对于早期识别和治疗组织缺氧和灌注不足的迹象非常重要,而这些迹象仍然是急性病情恶化的基本病理生理威胁。