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Incidence of cardiac arrests and unexpected deaths in surgical patients before and after implementation of a rapid response system

BACKGROUND: Rapid response systems (RRSs) are considered an important tool for improving patient safety. We studied the effect of an RRS on the incidence of cardiac arrests and unexpected deaths. METHODS: Retrospective before- after study in a university medical centre. We included 1376 surgical pat...

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Autores principales: Simmes, Friede M, Schoonhoven, Lisette, Mintjes, Joke, Fikkers, Bernard G, van der Hoeven, Johannes G
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3425134/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22716308
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2110-5820-2-20
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author Simmes, Friede M
Schoonhoven, Lisette
Mintjes, Joke
Fikkers, Bernard G
van der Hoeven, Johannes G
author_facet Simmes, Friede M
Schoonhoven, Lisette
Mintjes, Joke
Fikkers, Bernard G
van der Hoeven, Johannes G
author_sort Simmes, Friede M
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Rapid response systems (RRSs) are considered an important tool for improving patient safety. We studied the effect of an RRS on the incidence of cardiac arrests and unexpected deaths. METHODS: Retrospective before- after study in a university medical centre. We included 1376 surgical patients before (period 1) and 2410 patients after introduction of the RRS (period 2). Outcome measures were corrected for the baseline covariates age, gender and ASA. RESULTS: The number of patients who experienced a cardiac arrest and/or who died unexpectedly decreased non significantly from 0.50% (7/1376) in period 1 to 0.25% (6/2410) in period 2 (odds ratio (OR) 0.43, CI 0.14-1.30). The individual number of cardiac arrests decreased non-significantly from 0.29% (4/1367) to 0.12% (3/2410) (OR 0.38, CI 0.09-1.73) and the number of unexpected deaths decreased non-significantly from 0.36% (5/1376) to 0.17% (4/2410) (OR 0.42, CI 0.11-1.59). In contrast, the number of unplanned ICU admissions increased from 2.47% (34/1376) in period 1 to 4.15% (100/2400) in period 2 (OR 1.66, CI 1.07-2.55). Median APACHE ll score at unplanned ICU admissions was 16 in period 1 versus 16 in period 2 (NS). Adherence to RRS procedures. Observed abnormal early warning scores ≤72 h preceding a cardiac arrest, unexpected death or an unplanned ICU admission increased from 65% (24/37 events) in period 1 to 91% (91/101 events) in period 2 (p < 0.001). Related ward physician interventions increased from 38% (9/24 events) to 89% (81/91 events) (p < 0.001). In period 2, ward physicians activated the medical emergency team in 65% of the events (59/91), although in 16% (15/91 events) activation was delayed for one or two days. The overall medical emergency team dose was 56/1000 admissions. CONCLUSIONS: Introduction of an RRS resulted in a 50% reduction in cardiac arrest rates and/or unexpected death. However, this decrease was not statistically significant partly due to the low base-line incidence. Moreover, delayed activation due to the two-tiered medical emergency team activation procedure and suboptimal adherence of the ward staff to the RRS procedures may have further abated the positive results.
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spelling pubmed-34251342012-08-23 Incidence of cardiac arrests and unexpected deaths in surgical patients before and after implementation of a rapid response system Simmes, Friede M Schoonhoven, Lisette Mintjes, Joke Fikkers, Bernard G van der Hoeven, Johannes G Ann Intensive Care Research BACKGROUND: Rapid response systems (RRSs) are considered an important tool for improving patient safety. We studied the effect of an RRS on the incidence of cardiac arrests and unexpected deaths. METHODS: Retrospective before- after study in a university medical centre. We included 1376 surgical patients before (period 1) and 2410 patients after introduction of the RRS (period 2). Outcome measures were corrected for the baseline covariates age, gender and ASA. RESULTS: The number of patients who experienced a cardiac arrest and/or who died unexpectedly decreased non significantly from 0.50% (7/1376) in period 1 to 0.25% (6/2410) in period 2 (odds ratio (OR) 0.43, CI 0.14-1.30). The individual number of cardiac arrests decreased non-significantly from 0.29% (4/1367) to 0.12% (3/2410) (OR 0.38, CI 0.09-1.73) and the number of unexpected deaths decreased non-significantly from 0.36% (5/1376) to 0.17% (4/2410) (OR 0.42, CI 0.11-1.59). In contrast, the number of unplanned ICU admissions increased from 2.47% (34/1376) in period 1 to 4.15% (100/2400) in period 2 (OR 1.66, CI 1.07-2.55). Median APACHE ll score at unplanned ICU admissions was 16 in period 1 versus 16 in period 2 (NS). Adherence to RRS procedures. Observed abnormal early warning scores ≤72 h preceding a cardiac arrest, unexpected death or an unplanned ICU admission increased from 65% (24/37 events) in period 1 to 91% (91/101 events) in period 2 (p < 0.001). Related ward physician interventions increased from 38% (9/24 events) to 89% (81/91 events) (p < 0.001). In period 2, ward physicians activated the medical emergency team in 65% of the events (59/91), although in 16% (15/91 events) activation was delayed for one or two days. The overall medical emergency team dose was 56/1000 admissions. CONCLUSIONS: Introduction of an RRS resulted in a 50% reduction in cardiac arrest rates and/or unexpected death. However, this decrease was not statistically significant partly due to the low base-line incidence. Moreover, delayed activation due to the two-tiered medical emergency team activation procedure and suboptimal adherence of the ward staff to the RRS procedures may have further abated the positive results. Springer 2012-06-20 /pmc/articles/PMC3425134/ /pubmed/22716308 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2110-5820-2-20 Text en Copyright ©2012 Simmes et al.; licensee Springer. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Simmes, Friede M
Schoonhoven, Lisette
Mintjes, Joke
Fikkers, Bernard G
van der Hoeven, Johannes G
Incidence of cardiac arrests and unexpected deaths in surgical patients before and after implementation of a rapid response system
title Incidence of cardiac arrests and unexpected deaths in surgical patients before and after implementation of a rapid response system
title_full Incidence of cardiac arrests and unexpected deaths in surgical patients before and after implementation of a rapid response system
title_fullStr Incidence of cardiac arrests and unexpected deaths in surgical patients before and after implementation of a rapid response system
title_full_unstemmed Incidence of cardiac arrests and unexpected deaths in surgical patients before and after implementation of a rapid response system
title_short Incidence of cardiac arrests and unexpected deaths in surgical patients before and after implementation of a rapid response system
title_sort incidence of cardiac arrests and unexpected deaths in surgical patients before and after implementation of a rapid response system
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3425134/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22716308
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2110-5820-2-20
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