Department of Emergency Medicine, University Hospital Aintree, Liverpool, UK
School of Medicine, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.
BMJ Open Qual. 2022 Jun;11(2). doi: 10.1136/bmjoq-2021-001777.
Carbon monoxide (CO) is an odourless gas produced by the incomplete combustion of carbon containing materials. CO poisoning causes a range of symptoms of which headache is the most common, occurring in up to 90% of patients. An audit in the Emergency Department at University Hospital Aintree, Liverpool, UK found a lack of clinical awareness among healthcare professionals (HCPs) with CO exposure being considered in only 0.8% of patients presenting with non-traumatic headache. This Quality Improvement Project (QIP) aimed to increase this consideration to 50% of presentations.
Three separate sequential Plan Do Study Act (PDSA) cycles were instigated. Interventions involved verbal reminders to frontline HCPs (cycle 1), using strategically placed CO posters (cycle 2) and finally designing and introducing a CO sticker education scheme (cycle 3). These stickers, highlighting the approved CO COMA acronym, were placed in patient notes to serve as a physical reminder for HCPs when seeing patients. Rapid cycle sequencing was used with each cycle lasting 2 weeks. Patient notes were analysed for evidence that the HCP considered a diagnosis of CO.
An average of 61 patients were included in each PDSA cycle. Given baseline findings, each cycle demonstrated positive results with CO awareness being considered in 1.7% and 10.0% of patients with non-traumatic headache following cycles 1 and 2, respectively. The final PDSA cycle demonstrated significant increase in consideration of CO to 42.1% of non-traumatic headache presentations.
This QIP demonstrated that even small interventions can lead to significant change in awareness of CO exposure. Implementation of a CO sticker education scheme is a feasible way of increasing awareness among emergency care professionals and serves as a low-cost, easy to use, transferable and sustainable solution to address the lack of CO awareness in acute emergency settings. Importantly, this serves to promote improved patient safety.
一氧化碳(CO)是一种无味气体,由含碳物质不完全燃烧产生。CO 中毒会引起一系列症状,其中头痛最为常见,高达 90%的患者会出现头痛。英国利物浦安特里大学医院的急诊科进行的一项审计发现,医护人员对 CO 暴露的临床意识不足,仅有 0.8%的非创伤性头痛患者被考虑 CO 暴露。本质量改进项目(QIP)旨在将这一考虑比例提高到 50%。
实施了三个独立的连续计划-执行-研究-行动(PDSA)循环。干预措施包括向前线医护人员提供口头提醒(循环 1)、使用战略性放置的 CO 海报(循环 2),以及最终设计并引入 CO 贴纸教育计划(循环 3)。这些贴纸突出了经批准的 CO COMA 缩写,贴在患者病历中,作为医护人员看到患者时的物理提醒。每个循环持续 2 周,采用快速循环排序。分析患者病历以证明医护人员考虑了 CO 诊断。
每个 PDSA 循环平均纳入 61 名患者。考虑到基线发现,在第 1 和第 2 个循环后,非创伤性头痛患者中分别有 1.7%和 10.0%的患者被考虑 CO,每个循环都取得了积极的结果。最后一个 PDSA 循环中,非创伤性头痛患者中考虑 CO 的比例显著增加到 42.1%。
本 QIP 表明,即使是小的干预措施也可以显著提高对 CO 暴露的认识。实施 CO 贴纸教育计划是提高急救专业人员意识的一种可行方法,是一种低成本、易于使用、可转移和可持续的解决方案,可解决急性急救环境中缺乏 CO 意识的问题。重要的是,这有助于提高患者安全性。