卧床休息时间:质量度量的新使用允许住院病人提供者改善急诊科的病人流量。

Emergency medicine journal : EMJ Pub Date : 2022-03-01 Epub Date: 2021-02-16 DOI:10.1136/emermed-2020-209425
Benjamin Bodnar, Erin M Kane, Hetal Rupani, Henry Michtalik, Veena G Billioux, Ashley Pleiss, Linda Huffman, Kimiyoshi Kobayashi, Rohit Toteja, Daniel J Brotman, Carrie Herzke
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:急诊科(ED)入住时间与住院时间(LOS)和住院死亡率的增加有关。尽管有文献记载急诊科登机对住院患者预后的影响,但住院患者和急诊科提供者对这一问题的关注之间仍然存在差异。从住院病人提供者的角度来看,缺乏高收益策略来解决ED登机问题可能会阻碍对该主题的改进倡议的参与。因此,需要进一步的工作来确定住院患者的指标和策略,以解决患者流动问题,并可能改善急诊科的登机时间。方法:经过初步的系统分析,我们的多学科质量改进(QI)小组定义了过程时间指标“床停时间”,即出院患者腾出床位的时间到急诊科患者被分配到该床位的时间。使用精益西格玛QI方法,该指标的目标是改善三级保健学术医疗中心的内科住院医生服务。干预措施:干预措施包括提高住院医生对问题的认识,实时通知空床位,每周通过电子邮件回顾绩效仪表板,以及创建住院程序指导文件。结果:这一揽子干预措施与入院的急诊患者平均卧床时间减少125分钟(254分钟至129分钟)有关。结论:在我们的项目中,使用床上停机度量作为QI目标与过程时间的显著改进有关。使用这一指标可以提高住院医生参与QI工作的能力,以改善急诊科的病人流量。需要进一步研究来确定使用这一指标是否可以有效地减少住院时间,而不需要改变LOS或出院模式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Bed downtime: the novel use of a quality metric allows inpatient providers to improve patient flow from the emergency department.

Background: Emergency department (ED) boarding time is associated with increased length of stay (LOS) and inpatient mortality. Despite the documented impact of ED boarding on inpatient outcomes, a disparity continues to exist between the attention paid to the issue by inpatient and ED providers. A perceived lack of high yield strategies to address ED boarding from the perspective of the inpatient provider may discourage involvement in improvement initiatives on the subject. As such, further work is needed to identify inpatient metrics and strategies to address patient flow problems, and which may improve ED boarding time.

Methods: After initial system analysis, our multidisciplinary quality improvement (QI) group defined the process time metric 'bed downtime'-the time from which a bed is vacated by a discharged patient to the time an ED patient is assigned to that bed. Using the Lean Sigma QI approach, this metric was targeted for improvement on the internal medicine hospitalist service at a tertiary care academic medical centre.

Interventions: Interventions included improving inpatient provider awareness of the problem, real-time provider notification of empty beds, a weekly retrospective emailed performance dashboard and the creation of a guideline document for admission procedures.

Results: This package of interventions was associated with a 125 min reduction in mean bed downtime for incoming ED patients (254 min to 129 min) admitted to the intervention unit.

Conclusion: Use of the bed downtime metric as a QI target was associated with marked improvements in process time during our project. The use of this metric may enhance the ability of inpatient providers to participate in QI efforts to improve patient flow from the ED. Further study is needed to determine if use of the metric may be effective at reducing boarding time without requiring alterations to LOS or discharge patterns.

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