Department of Emergency Medicine, Yale-New Haven Hospital, New Haven, CT.
Department of Emergency Medicine, Yale-New Haven Hospital, New Haven, CT.
Ann Emerg Med. 2022 May;79(5):453-464. doi: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2021.10.013. Epub 2021 Dec 1.
Agitation, defined as excessive psychomotor activity leading to violent and aggressive behavior, is becoming more prevalent in the emergency department (ED) amidst a strained behavioral health system. Team-based interventions have demonstrated promise in promoting de-escalation, with the hope of minimizing the need for invasive techniques, like physical restraints. This study aimed to evaluate an interprofessional code response team intervention to manage agitation in the ED with the goal of decreasing physical restraint use.
This quality improvement study occurred over 3 phases, representing stepwise rollout of the intervention: (1) preimplementation (phase I) to establish baseline outcome rates; (2) design and administrative support (phase II) to conduct training and protocol design; and (3) implementation (phase III) of the code response team. An interrupted time-series analysis was used to compare trends between phases to evaluate the primary outcome of physical restraint orders occurring during the study period.
Within the 634,578 ED visits over a 5-year period, restraint use significantly declined sequentially over the 3 phases (1.1%, 0.9%, and 0.8%, absolute change -0.3% between phases I and III, 95% confidence interval [CI] -0.4% to 0.3%), which corresponded to a 27.3% proportionate decrease in restraint rates between phases I and III. For the interrupted time-series analysis, there was a significantly decreasing slope in biweekly restraints in phase II compared to phase I (slope, -0.05 restraints per 1,000 ED visits per 2-week period, 95% CI -0.07 to -0.03), which was sustained in an incremental fashion in phase III (slope, -0.05, 95% CI -0.07 to -0.02).
With the implementation of a structured agitation code response team intervention combined with design and administrative support, a decreased rate of physical restraint use occurred over a 5-year period. Results suggest that investment in organizational change, along with interprofessional collaboration during the management of agitated patients in the ED, can lead to sustained reductions in the use of an invasive and potentially harmful measure on patients.
在行为健康系统紧张的情况下,急诊科(ED)中过度的精神运动活动导致暴力和攻击性行为的躁动症越来越普遍。团队为基础的干预措施在促进降级方面显示出了希望,希望能最大限度地减少对侵入性技术的需求,如身体约束。本研究旨在评估一种跨专业代码响应团队干预措施,以管理 ED 中的躁动症,目标是减少身体约束的使用。
这项质量改进研究分三个阶段进行,代表干预措施的逐步推出:(1)实施前(阶段 I),以确定基线结果率;(2)设计和行政支持(阶段 II),以进行培训和协议设计;(3)实施(阶段 III)代码响应团队。使用中断时间序列分析比较各阶段之间的趋势,以评估研究期间发生的身体约束令的主要结果。
在 5 年期间的 634578 次 ED 就诊中,约束的使用在 3 个阶段中呈顺序下降趋势(1.1%、0.9%和 0.8%,I 期和 III 期之间的绝对变化为-0.3%,95%置信区间[CI]为-0.4%至 0.3%),这对应于 I 期和 III 期之间约束率的 27.3%的比例下降。对于中断时间序列分析,在 II 期与 I 期相比,双周约束的斜率呈显著下降趋势(斜率为每 1000 次 ED 就诊每 2 周期间减少 0.05 次约束,95%CI 为-0.07 至-0.03),在 III 期以递增方式持续(斜率为-0.05,95%CI 为-0.07 至-0.02)。
随着结构化躁动代码响应团队干预措施的实施,以及设计和行政支持的实施,在 5 年期间,身体约束的使用率下降。结果表明,对组织变革的投资,以及在 ED 中对躁动患者进行管理时的跨专业合作,可以持续减少对患者有潜在危害的侵入性措施的使用。