ED吸入器革命:一种简单的方法,大大减少碳足迹和吸入器在急诊科的使用成本。

IF 2.4
CJEM Pub Date : 2025-05-01 Epub Date: 2025-03-08 DOI:10.1007/s43678-025-00884-8
Laura F Wilson, Lucas B Chartier, Christian James Turner
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目标:随着全球变暖的加剧,医疗保健行业面临着治疗与气候有关的疾病和审查我们的温室气体排放的平行需求。用于治疗反应性呼吸道疾病的计量吸入器药物占医疗保健排放的很大一部分。计量吸入器经常被过度处方,标签不足,并在急诊室(ED)几次启动后丢失。类似成本和效果的低温室气体替代品很容易获得,例如干粉吸入器,许多指南支持实践变革,但没有发表的工作表明试图改变急诊科的实践模式。这一质量改进倡议旨在通过员工教育活动改善急诊科的吸入器处方、使用和处置。方法:在三级急诊科,我们对急诊科护士和医生实施了两阶段的教育活动。被动教育技术(海报、电子邮件、演讲)之后是主动教育(一对一会议、模拟案例)。目的包括改进绿色处方实践、药物标签、患者教育、正确处理和开药前肺功能检测。我们只鼓励在轻度和中度反应性气道疾病病例中改变练习。结果:我们显示,与去年同期相比,沙丁胺醇计量吸入器在前6个月减少了19%,在随后的6个月减少了43%。这可能相当于汽车行驶约96,000公里的碳排放量,或接近地球周长的2.5倍。过程措施显示,干粉吸入器的配药增加,处方者的知识和替代品的舒适度迅速提高。结论:负担过重的急诊科员工仍然愿意并能够改变实践,以实现环境的可持续性。这个项目的迅速成功应该鼓励加拿大急诊室的可持续性考虑的扩展,并进入各级医疗保健的临床和行政决策。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
ED inhaler revolution: a simple method to substantially reduce the carbon footprint and cost of inhaler use in the emergency department.

Objectives: As global warming intensifies, the healthcare industry faces a parallel need to treat climate-related illness and scrutinize our greenhouse gas emissions. Metered-dose inhaler medications for reactive airways diseases constitute a substantial portion of healthcare emissions. Metered-dose inhalers are often overprescribed, underlabeled, and lost after a few actuations in the emergency department (ED). Lower greenhouse gas alternatives of similar cost and efficacy are readily available, such as dry-powder inhalers, and numerous guidelines support practice change, yet no published work has shown attempts to change practice patterns in the ED. This quality improvement initiative sought to improve inhaler prescribing, use, and disposal in our ED through a staff education campaign.

Methods: In a tertiary care ED, we implemented a two-staged education campaign for ED nurses and doctors. Passive education techniques (posters, emails, presentations) were followed by active education (one-on-one sessions, simulated cases). Objectives included improvement of green-prescribing practices, medication labeling, patient education, proper disposal, and pulmonary function testing prior to prescribing. We encouraged practice change only in mild and moderate cases of reactive airway disease.

Results: We showed a 19% reduction over the first 6 months, and a 43% reduction the following 6 months in salbutamol metered-dose inhaler dispensations, relative to the same period the year prior. This may correspond to the carbon equivalent of driving approximately 96,000 km by car, or nearly 2.5 times the Earth's circumference. Process measures revealed increased dispensations of dry-powder inhalers and a quick improvement in prescriber knowledge and comfort with alternatives.

Conclusion: Overburdened ED staff remain willing and able to change practice toward environmental sustainability. The rapid success of this project should encourage expansion of sustainability considerations across Canadian EDs, and into clinical and administrative decision-making at all levels of healthcare.

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