quality improvement programme
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2021 ◽  
Vol 108 (Supplement_7) ◽  
Author(s):  
Vivek Chitre ◽  
Bence Atkari ◽  
Ari Sivakkolunthu ◽  
Robert Woods ◽  
Roshan Lal

Abstract Aim To describe how NELA inspired an ‘improving emergency surgery’ quality improvement programme that produced improvements in 4 distinct areas of surgical practice. Methods This paper describes how Kotter's improvement methodology was implemented in a district general hospital to achieve NELA targets, reduce the negative appendicectomy rate in children, implement NICE guidance on early laparoscopic cholecystectomy for acute cholecystitis and consistently deliver the 'S' and 'A' of SAFER within the surgery department. Results As a result of a systematic quality improvement approach, Conclusions Incorporating NELA into a local 'improving emergency surgery' quality improvement programme has delivered important and wide-ranging benefits beyond emergency laparotomy, and protected the service from 'crowding out behaviour' where focus on a single quality improvement can come at the expense of quality in other areas.


2021 ◽  
Vol 108 (Supplement_7) ◽  
Author(s):  
Vivek Chitre ◽  
Robert Woods ◽  
Roshan Lal

Abstract Aim To describe methodology of the quality improvement programme. To assess outcomes and balancing measures. Methods This paper describes how Kotter’s 8-step improvement model was applied in a District General Hospital. The primary outcome (negative appendicectomy rate) was assessed using GIRFT data over 6 years. Reducing negative appendicectomies might conceivably result in delayed surgery (with a potentially increased incidence of perforated/gangrenous appendicitis), increased length of stay (LOS) and increased readmissions due to delay-related complications. These were assessed by a retrospective audit of appendicectomies performed over the same 8-week period in 2016 and 2019. Results The negative appendicectomy rate in children fell from 16% in 2016-2017 (England average 12%) to 4% in 2017-2018. The improvement was sustained at 6% in 2018-2019 (England average 11%). The incidence of perforated/gangrenous appendicitis decreased by 6% from 23% in 2016 to 16% in 2019. Average LOS decreased from 4 days in 2016 to 3 days in 2019. There was 1 (3%) readmission within 7 days in 2016, and 2 (6%) in 2019. Reasons for readmission were postoperative small bowel obstruction due to omental band adhesion(1) and persistent pain (2). None were caused by delayed operation. Conclusions A sustained improvement in negative appendicectomy rate can be achieved by adopting a systematic quality improvement approach. Against expectations, the reduction in negative appendicectomy rate was associated with a slight decrease in average LOS and reduced frequency of perforated/gangrenous appendicitis. There was no significant increase in readmissions, and none were due to delayed operations.


2021 ◽  
pp. bmjqs-2021-013110
Author(s):  
Sanjay Mahant ◽  
Jun Guan ◽  
Jessie Zhang ◽  
Sima Gandhi ◽  
Evan Jon Propst ◽  
...  

BackgroundTonsillectomy is among the most common and cumulatively expensive surgical procedures in children, with known variations in quality of care. However, evidence on health system interventions to improve quality of care is limited. The Quality-Based Procedures (QBP) programme in Ontario, Canada, introduced fixed episode hospital payment per tonsillectomy and disseminated a perioperative care pathway. We determined the association of this payment and quality improvement programme with tonsillectomy quality of care.MethodsInterrupted time series analysis of children undergoing elective tonsillectomy at community and children’s hospitals in Ontario in the QBP period (1 April 2014 to 31 December 2018) and the pre-QBP period (1 January 2009 to 31 January 2014) using health administrative data. We compared the age-standardised and sex-standardised rates for all-cause tonsillectomy-related revisits within 30 days, opioid prescription fills within 30 days and index tonsillectomy inpatient admission.Results111 411 children underwent tonsillectomy: 51 967 in the QBP period and 59 444 in the pre-QBP period (annual median number of hospitals, 86 (range 77–93)). Following QBP programme implementation, revisit rates decreased for all-cause tonsillectomy-related revisits (0.48 to −0.18 revisits per 1000 tonsillectomies per month; difference −0.66 revisits per 1000 tonsillectomies per month (95% CI −0.97 to −0.34); p<0.0001). Codeine prescription fill rate continued to decrease but at a slower rate (−4.81 to −0.11 prescriptions per 1000 tonsillectomies per month; difference 4.69 (95% CI 3.60 to 5.79) prescriptions per 1000 tonsillectomies per month; p<0.0001). The index tonsillectomy inpatient admission rate decreased (1.12 to 0.23 admissions per 1000 tonsillectomies per month; difference −0.89 (95% CI −1.33 to −0.44) admissions per 1000 tonsillectomies per month; p<0.0001).ConclusionsThe payment and quality improvement programme was associated with several improvements in quality of care. These findings may inform jurisdictions planning health system interventions to improve quality of care for tonsillectomy and other paediatric procedures.


Author(s):  
Amy K Keir ◽  
Emily Shepherd ◽  
Sarah McIntyre ◽  
Alice Rumbold ◽  
Charlotte Groves ◽  
...  

Magnesium sulfate given to women before birth at <30 weeks’ gestation reduces the risk of cerebral palsy in their children. Our study aimed to assess the impact of a local quality improvement programme, primarily using plan-do-study-act cycles, to increase the use of antenatal magnesium sulfate. After implementing our quality improvement programme, an average of 86% of babies delivered at <30 weeks’ gestation were exposed to antenatal magnesium sulfate compared with a historical baseline rate of 63%. Our study strengthens the case for embedding quality improvement programmes in maternal perinatal care to reduce the impact of cerebral palsy on families and society.


BJPsych Open ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (S1) ◽  
pp. S53-S54
Author(s):  
Hina Tahseen ◽  
Jade Brown

AimsTo determine the effects of a tailored quality improvement programme for effective medication management including a reduction in prescription and administration errors in oral and depot psychotropic medication, patient education on medication and implementation of policies and guidelines.BackgroundMedication errors are common in hospital admissions and pose a threat to patient safety (Buckley et al. 2013). Medication errors may occur in different stages of the patient treatment process such as during prescribing, transcribing, preparing, dispensing, administration, and monitoring (Wang et al. 2015). In addition to these, for the detained mental health patients, the Mental Health Act 1983 legislation requires up-to-date treatment certificate compliance (Wales. Welsh Assembly 2008). A Quality Improvement programme to improve safe medication prescription and administration was designed for the patients admitted in Delfryn House, a mental health high dependency rehabilitation unit.MethodUsing Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) quality improvement methodology, a medication management committee was created under the leadership of Specialty doctor and Head of Care (HOC), and comprising of the consultant psychiatrists, specialty doctor, heads of care (ward managers), senior nurses, pharmacists, hospital manager and hospital director. The committee reviewed the medication errors reported in the last year and planned the Pre-Intervention Phase 1 and Post Intervention Phase II Audits.The Intervention project was broadly divided into two domains---Doctors’ Prescription led by the Specialty doctor and the Nurses’ Medication Administration, led by the Head of care. Using the QI “theory of change” model, three primary drivers of “Safe Prescription and Administration”, “Patient Education” and “Policies and Guidelines Implementation” were established. The poster will have a demonstration of the complete drivers’ diagram.Secondary drivers for “Safe prescription and administration” required inputs from doctors, nurses and pharmacists; Change ideas (Interventions) of introducing In-patient depot clinics, Daily 10-Points self-audit by clinic nurse, twice daily information about patients’ medication compliance in morning and evening electronic handovers, PDSAs with monthly audits of prescription and administration errors, monthly pharmacists’ audits for drug interactions and monitoring of adverse effects and rapid tranquilisations were implemented.Secondary drivers and change ideas for “Patient Education” included discussions with Multidisciplinary teams, medication information leaflets being available to patients, discussion slots with pharmacists, self-administration of medication, and alternate self-management strategies instead of PRN medications.Secondary drivers and change ideas for the “Policies and Guidelines Implementation” included steps to ensure all staff were aware of the policies for safe drug administration, rapid tranquilization and PRN utilisation, medication meetings minutes being circulated to all staff, and monthly audits for MHA1983 Section 57 treatment certificates for detained patients.The medication Management Committee continued to meet on monthly basis to review the interventions, implementation of new strategies, and new recommendations on the basis of monthly mini-audits. A patient satisfaction survey on their knowledge about prescribed psychotropic medication was also conducted pre and post-intervention.ResultResults of Phase I and Phase 11 were compared. There was a significant reduction in prescription errors by doctors (19% to 3%) and medication administration (34% to 11%). Mental health documentation compliance improved from 77% to 98%. Patient satisfaction survey also demonstrated more knowledge about their prescribed psychotropic medication (15% to 32%). Two areas however did not show satisfactory improvements; There was not a significant improvement in acknowledgment or documentation of potential drug interactions or adverse events raised by pharmacists. Errors related to depot medication administration reduced in the initial two months, but increased again. The introduction of the Weekly Depot Clinic was not found successful by the administering nursing staff, and it was moved back to daily administrations.ConclusionThe formation of the medication management committee and the quality improvement programme showed significant improvement in most areas of effective medication management. The primary and secondary drivers with the change ideas gave structure to the intervention programme. The mini-audits using PDSA methodology helped to test different interventional strategies and to assess their impact and building upon the learning from previous results. This shows that for sustained effective medication management, this should not be a one-off exercise, and we need to continue learning and implementing newer strategies for continued effective medication, taking on-board the advice from MDT, nursing, patients, and carers.


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