Care bundles to reduce re-admissions for patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a mixed-methods study

Katherine Morton, E. Sanderson, Padraig Dixon, Anna King, Sue Jenkins, S. MacNeill, A. Shaw, C. Metcalfe, M. Chalder, W. Hollingworth, J. Benger, J. Calvert, S. Purdy
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引用次数: 10

Abstract

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is the commonest respiratory disease in the UK, accounting for 10% of emergency hospital admissions annually. Nearly one-third of patients are re-admitted within 28 days of discharge.The study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of introducing standardised packages of care (i.e. care bundles) as a means of improving hospital care and reducing re-admissions for COPD.A mixed-methods evaluation with a controlled before-and-after design.Adults admitted to hospital with an acute exacerbation of COPD in England and Wales.COPD care bundles.The primary outcome was re-admission to hospital within 28 days of discharge. The study investigated secondary outcomes including length of stay, total number of bed-days, in-hospital mortality, 90-day mortality, context, process and costs of care, and staff, patient and carer experience.Routine NHS data, including numbers of COPD admissions and re-admissions, in-hospital mortality and length of stay data, were provided by 31 sites for 12 months before and after the intervention roll-out. Detailed pseudo-anonymised data on care during admission were collected from a subset of 14 sites, in addition to information about delivery of individual components of care collected from random samples of medical records at each location. Six case study sites provided data from interviews, observation and documentary review to explore implementation, engagement and perceived impact on delivery of care.There is no evidence that care bundles reduced 28-day re-admission rates for COPD. All-cause re-admission rates, in-hospital mortality, length of stay, total number of bed-days, and re-admission and mortality rates in the 90 days following discharge were similar at implementation and comparator sites, as were resource utilisation, NHS secondary care costs and cost-effectiveness of care. However, the rate of emergency department (ED) attendances decreased more in implementation sites than in comparator sites {implementation: incidence rate ratio (IRR) 0.63 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.56 to 0.70]; comparator: IRR 1.14 (95% CI 1.04 to 1.26) interactionp < 0.001}. Admission bundles appear to be more complex to implement than discharge bundles, with 3.7% of comparator patients receiving all five admission bundle elements, compared with 7.6% of patients in implementation sites, and 28.3% of patients in implementation sites receiving all five discharge bundle elements, compared with 0.8% of patients in the comparator sites. Although patients and carers were unaware that care was bundled, staff view bundles positively, as they help to standardise working practices, support a clear care pathway for patients, facilitate communication between clinicians and identify post-discharge support.The observational nature of the study design means that secular trends and residual confounding cannot be discounted as potential sources of any observed between-site differences. The availability of data from some sites was suboptimal.Care bundles are valued by health-care professionals, but were challenging to implement and there was a blurring of the distinction between the implementation and comparator groups, which may have contributed to the lack of effect on re-admissions and mortality. Care bundles do appear to be associated with a reduced number of subsequent ED attendances, but care bundles are unlikely to be cost-effective for COPD.A longitudinal study using implementation science methodology could provide more in-depth insights into the implementation of care bundles.Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN13022442.This project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research Health Services and Delivery Research programme and will be published in full inHealth Services and Delivery Research; Vol. 7, No. 21. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.
护理捆绑减少慢性阻塞性肺疾病患者再入院:一项混合方法研究
慢性阻塞性肺病(COPD)是英国最常见的呼吸道疾病,每年占急诊入院人数的10%。近三分之一的患者在出院后28天内再次入院。这项研究旨在评估引入标准化护理包(即护理包)作为改善医院护理和减少COPD再次入院的一种手段的有效性。这是一项混合方法评估,前后对照设计。英格兰和威尔士因COPD急性加重入院的成年人。COPD护理包。主要结果是出院后28天内再次入院。该研究调查了次要结果,包括住院时间、总床位天数、住院死亡率、90天死亡率、护理背景、流程和成本,以及工作人员、患者和护理人员的经验。英国国家医疗服务体系(NHS)的常规数据,包括COPD入院人数和再次入院人数、住院死亡率和住院时间数据,由31个站点在干预措施推出前后12个月提供。除了从每个地点的医疗记录随机样本中收集的有关护理各个组成部分的交付信息外,还从14个地点的子集中收集了入院期间护理的详细伪匿名数据。六个案例研究站点提供了访谈、观察和文献综述的数据,以探讨实施、参与和对护理提供的感知影响。没有证据表明捆绑护理降低了COPD患者28天的再次入院率。所有原因的再次入院率、住院死亡率、住院时间、总床位天数、出院后90天的再次入院和死亡率在实施点和对照点相似,资源利用率、NHS二级护理成本和护理成本效益也相似。然而,实施地点的急诊就诊率比对照地点下降得更多{实施:发病率比率(IRR)0.63[95%置信区间(CI)0.56至0.70];对照:IRR 1.14(95%CI 1.04至1.26)相互作用 < 0.001}。入院捆绑包的实施似乎比出院捆绑包更复杂,3.7%的对照患者接受了所有五种入院捆绑包元素,而实施点的患者为7.6%,实施点的28.3%的患者接受了全部五种出院捆绑包元素。尽管患者和护理人员不知道护理是捆绑的,但工作人员对捆绑的看法是积极的,因为它们有助于标准化工作实践,为患者提供清晰的护理途径,促进临床医生之间的沟通,并确定出院后的支持。研究设计的观察性意味着,长期趋势和残余混杂因素不能被视为任何观察到的站点间差异的潜在来源。某些站点的数据可用性不理想。医疗保健专业人员重视一揽子护理,但实施起来很有挑战性,实施组和对照组之间的区别也很模糊,这可能导致对重新入院和死亡率没有影响。捆绑护理似乎确实与随后ED就诊次数的减少有关,但捆绑护理对COPD来说不太可能具有成本效益。使用实施科学方法进行的纵向研究可以对捆绑护理的实施提供更深入的见解。目前的对照试验ISRCTN13022442。该项目由国家卫生研究所卫生服务和交付研究计划资助,并将在《卫生服务与交付研究》上全文发表;第7卷第21期。有关更多项目信息,请访问NIHR期刊图书馆网站。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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