scholarly journals The ‘Allergy alert’ campaign; Use of a Red wristband as an indicator of allergy in all surgical patients of Colombo South Teaching Hospital - A quality improvement project

2018 ◽  
Vol 26 (2) ◽  
pp. 162
Author(s):  
Nimangee Wathsala Mithraratne ◽  
Sita Alwis
Author(s):  
Mohammad Almeqdadi ◽  
Hari Krishnan Nair ◽  
Jeoffrey Hill ◽  
Julian Sanchez-Cruz ◽  
Claudia Nader ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 097-103
Author(s):  
Kaitlin M. Flannery ◽  
Jean C. Uwimana ◽  
Cesarie Nikuze ◽  
Jean B. Uwineza ◽  
Ana M. Crawford

Background: Due to the inhibition of thermoregulation by anesthetics, hypothermia occurs in 50% of patients undergoing general and neuraxial anesthesia without active warming. High-quality research has shown the negative effects of intraoperative hypothermia including increased rates of surgical site infections, increased hospital length of stay, increased cardiac morbidity and increased rate of transfusion. The University Teaching Hospital of Kigali commonly known as CHUK is the largest public referral hospital in Rwanda. The International Standards for Safe Anesthesia were not being met regarding intraoperative temperature management at CHUK. However, due to high ambient temperature in the operating room, it was unknown if this was a significant problem and worth investment, in a health system, with limited resources. Methods: After institutional review board approval, a two-stage descriptive cross-sectional quality improvement project was performed. The first stage was to assess current management of intra-operative temperature, determine if there was a significant rate of hypothermia and establish risk factors for developing intra-operative hypothermia in this clinical setting. The second stage was to determine if locally available warming techniques, an underbody warming blanket, significantly reduced the incidence of intra-operative hypothermia. Results: The primary result of the study was a 58% incidence of hypothermia with current standard practice. This was reduced to 6% with the use of an underbody water blanket. Temperature was measure intraoperatively in only 6% of cases and never documented. Adult patients and patients undergoing neuraxial anesthesia were more likely to experience hypothermia. Conclusions: Intraoperative hypothermia is common at CHUK despite high ambient operating room temperature. Monitoring and documentation of temperature is not occurring on a regular basis. The use of underbody water body, though not the gold standard for intraoperative warming, was effective in this study and a realistic solution in an environment with limited resources.


2021 ◽  
Vol 108 (Supplement_2) ◽  
Author(s):  
C Osborne

Abstract Introduction Sepsis is a complex, life-threatening condition, posing a significant burden to both NHS resources and society in general. Bacteraemia is a common presentation in surgical pathology and requires prompt investigation and treatment. Blood cultures remain the gold standard for detecting bacteraemia and providing targeted antibiotic therapy. We aimed to improve the overall use of blood cultures in pyrexial surgical patients. Method A three-loop, prospective quality improvement project was performed. Patients identified as being pyrexial were reviewed to determine when it was recorded and whether blood cultures were taken. Following a departmental presentation, two further audit cycles were performed at two months and seven months post-intervention to determine long-term response. Result A total of 56 patients were included over the three audit cycles. Blood culture adherence improved from 58.7% at baseline to 65% at 7 months. Most notably, out-of-hours compliance improved from 44.4% to 66.6%. 2-month compliance was 85%, however, this comprised of only 7 patients. Conclusions Early recognition and management of sepsis remains a key area of improvement. Whilst overall and out-of-hour blood culture compliance improved, continued education is needed to further increase this.


Author(s):  
Ciara Gleeson ◽  
Maria Baily-Scanlan ◽  
Jenny Brady ◽  
Marian Broderick ◽  
Lorraine Dolan ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document