Quality Improvement Initiative Increasing Early Discharges From an Acute Care Cardiology Unit for Cardiac Surgery and Cardiology Patients-Associated With Reduced Hospital Length of Stay

被引:3
|
作者
Colyer, Jessica [1 ]
Ring, Lisa [2 ,3 ]
Gallagher, Sarah [2 ]
Mullenholz, Mary [2 ]
Robison, Jan [2 ]
Rigney-Radford, Kathleen [2 ]
Harahsheh, Ashraf S. [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Seattle Childrens Hosp, Dept Cardiol, Seattle, WA USA
[2] Childrens Natl Hosp, Div Cardiol, Washington, DC USA
[3] George Washington Univ, Sch Med & Hlth Sci, Dept Pediat, Washington, DC 20052 USA
关键词
OUTCOMES;
D O I
10.1097/pq9.0000000000000587
中图分类号
R72 [儿科学];
学科分类号
100202 ;
摘要
Introduction: Discharging patients from the acute care setting is complex and requires orchestration of many clinical and technical processes. Focusing on timely discharges improves throughput by off-loading ICUs and coordinating safe outpatient transitions. Our data review demonstrated most discharges occurred later in the day. We sought to improve our discharge times for cardiology and cardiovascular surgery (CVS) patients in our 26-bed inpatient acute care cardiology unit (ACCU). We aimed to increase the number of discharges between 6 am and 12 pm for cardiology and CVS patients on ACCU from 5 to 10 patients per month over 6 months and sustain. Methods: We performed a simplified Failure Mode Effect Analysis on the discharge process and identified improvement opportunities. Our key drivers centered around education, documentation, and planning. Our interventions included: staff education, communication of discharge expectations, daily quality board rounds, hospital-wide collaboration emphasizing conditional discharges, and hospital information technology (IT) improvements. We utilized statistical process control charts to analyze the data. Results: Discharges between 6 am, and 12 pm increased from a baseline of 5 (8%) to 12 (18%) patients per month with a centerline shift. Our process measures demonstrated appropriate conditional discharge usage linked to earlier discharges. Upgrades to our EMR, documentation further increased our timely discharges. Our efforts resulted in a 22% reduction in hospital length of stay from 11.2 to 8.7 days without increased readmission rates suggesting that improved efficiency did not impact care quality. Conclusion: We successfully show how multidisciplinary collaboration and systems-based improvement can increase the number of safe, early discharges.
引用
收藏
页数:8
相关论文
共 40 条
  • [1] Impact of a statewide intensive care unit quality improvement initiative on hospital mortality and length of stay: retrospective comparative analysis
    Lipitz-Snyderman, Allison
    Steinwachs, Donald
    Needham, Dale M.
    Colantuoni, Elizabeth
    Morlock, Laura L
    Pronovos, Peter J
    BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2011, 342 : 323
  • [2] Predictors of Prolonged Length of Intensive Care Unit Stay After Stage I Palliation: A Report from the National Pediatric Cardiology Quality Improvement Collaborative
    Baker-Smith, Carissa M.
    Wilhelm, Carolyn M.
    Neish, Steven R.
    Klitzner, Thomas S.
    Beekman, Robert H., III
    Kugler, John D.
    Martin, Gerard R.
    Lannon, Carole
    Jenkins, Kathy J.
    Rosenthal, Geoffrey L.
    PEDIATRIC CARDIOLOGY, 2014, 35 (03) : 431 - 440
  • [3] Predictors of Prolonged Length of Intensive Care Unit Stay After Stage I Palliation: A Report from the National Pediatric Cardiology Quality Improvement Collaborative
    Carissa M. Baker-Smith
    Carolyn M. Wilhelm
    Steven R. Neish
    Thomas S. Klitzner
    Robert H. Beekman III
    John D. Kugler
    Gerard R. Martin
    Carole Lannon
    Kathy J. Jenkins
    Geoffrey L. Rosenthal
    Pediatric Cardiology, 2014, 35 : 431 - 440
  • [4] PREDICTORS OF PROLONGED LENGTH OF INTENSIVE CARE UNIT STAY FOLLOWING STAGE I PALLIATION: A REPORT FROM THE NATIONAL PEDIATRIC CARDIOLOGY QUALITY IMPROVEMENT COLLABORATIVE
    Jenkins, Kathy
    Klitzner, Thomas
    Kugler, John
    Martin, Gerard
    Neish, Steven
    Beekman, Robert
    Lannon, Carole
    Rosenthal, Geoffrey
    Baker-Smith, Carissa
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CARDIOLOGY, 2012, 59 (13) : E1879 - E1879
  • [5] Higher Stroke Unit Volume Associated With Improved Quality of Early Stroke Care and Reduced Length of Stay
    Svendsen, Marie Louise
    Ehlers, Lars Holger
    Ingeman, Annette
    Johnsen, Soren Paaske
    STROKE, 2012, 43 (11) : 3041 - U434
  • [6] Self-rated health is associated with the length of stay at the intensive care unit and hospital following cardiac surgery
    Cserep, Zsuzsanna
    Losoncz, Eszter
    Toth, Roland
    Toth, Attila
    Juhasz, Boglarka
    Balog, Piroska
    Vargha, Peter
    Gal, Janos
    Contrada, Richard J.
    Falger, Paul R. J.
    Szekely, Andrea
    BMC CARDIOVASCULAR DISORDERS, 2014, 14
  • [7] Self-rated health is associated with the length of stay at the intensive care unit and hospital following cardiac surgery
    Zsuzsanna Cserép
    Eszter Losoncz
    Roland Tóth
    Attila Tóth
    Boglárka Juhász
    Piroska Balog
    Péter Vargha
    János Gál
    Richard J Contrada
    Paul RJ Falger
    Andrea Székely
    BMC Cardiovascular Disorders, 14
  • [8] Early extubation is associated with reduced length of stay and improved outcomes after elective aortic surgery in the Vascular Quality Initiative
    David, Ramoncito A.
    Brooke, Benjamin S.
    Hanson, Kristine T.
    Goodney, Philip P.
    Genovese, Elizabeth A.
    Baril, Donald T.
    Gloviczki, Peter
    DeMartino, Randall R.
    JOURNAL OF VASCULAR SURGERY, 2017, 66 (01) : 79 - +
  • [9] Locoregional anesthesia is associated with reduced hospital stay and need for intensive care unit care of elective endovascular aneurysm repair patients in the Vascular Quality Initiative
    Zottola, Zachary R.
    Kruger, Joel L.
    Kong, Daniel S.
    Newhall, Karina A.
    Doyle, Adam J.
    Mix, Doran S.
    Stoner, Michael C.
    JOURNAL OF VASCULAR SURGERY, 2023, 77 (04) : 1061 - 1069
  • [10] Shorter Length of Hospital Stay Associated with Early Readmissions from Post-Acute Care
    Horney, C.
    Capp, R.
    Burke, R. E.
    Boxer, R. S.
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY, 2015, 63 : S99 - S99