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Cohorting Dengue Patients Improves the Quality of Care and Clinical Outcome

INTRODUCTION: The increasing incidence of dengue among adults in Malaysia and other countries has important implications for health services. Before 2004, in order to cope with the surge in adult dengue admissions, each of the six medical wards in a university hospital took turns daily to admit and...

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Autores principales: Lum, Lucy C. S., Syed Omar, Sharifah Faridah, Sri La Sri Ponnampalavanar, Sasheela, Tan, Lian H., Sekaran, Shamala Devi, Kamarulzaman, Adeeba
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4457480/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26047325
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0003836
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author Lum, Lucy C. S.
Syed Omar, Sharifah Faridah
Sri La Sri Ponnampalavanar, Sasheela
Tan, Lian H.
Sekaran, Shamala Devi
Kamarulzaman, Adeeba
author_facet Lum, Lucy C. S.
Syed Omar, Sharifah Faridah
Sri La Sri Ponnampalavanar, Sasheela
Tan, Lian H.
Sekaran, Shamala Devi
Kamarulzaman, Adeeba
author_sort Lum, Lucy C. S.
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: The increasing incidence of dengue among adults in Malaysia and other countries has important implications for health services. Before 2004, in order to cope with the surge in adult dengue admissions, each of the six medical wards in a university hospital took turns daily to admit and manage patients with dengue. Despite regular in-house training, the implementation of the WHO 1997 dengue case management guidelines by the multiple medical teams was piecemeal and resulted in high variability of care. A restructuring of adult dengue inpatient service in 2004 resulted in all patients being admitted to one ward under the care of the infectious disease unit. Hospital and Intensive Care Unit admission criteria, discharge criteria and clinical laboratory testing were maintained unchanged throughout the study period. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the impact of cohorting adult dengue patients on the quality of care and the clinical outcome in a university hospital in Malaysia. METHODS: A pre (2003) and post-intervention (2005–6) retrospective study was undertaken. INTERVENTION: Cohorting all dengue patients under the care of the Infectious Disease team in a designated ward in 2004. RESULTS: The number of patients enrolled was 352 in 2003, 785 in 2005 and 1158 in 2006. The evaluation and detection of haemorrhage remained high (>90%) and unchanged throughout the study period. The evaluation of plasma leakage increased from 35.4% pre-intervention to 78.8% post-intervention (p = <0.001) while its detection increased from 11.4% to 41.6% (p = <0.001). Examination for peripheral perfusion was undertaken in only 13.1% of patients pre-intervention, with a significant increase post-intervention, 18.6% and 34.2% respectively, p = <0.001. Pre-intervention, more patients had hypotension (21.5%) than detected peripheral hypoperfusion (11.4%), indicating that clinicians recognised shock only when patients developed hypotension. In contrast, post-intervention, clinicians recognised peripheral hypoperfusion as an early sign of shock. The highest haematocrit was significantly higher post-intervention but the lowest total white cell counts and platelet counts remained unchanged. A significant and progressive reduction in the use of platelet transfusions occurred, from 21.7% pre-intervention to 14.6% in 2005 and 5.2% in 2006 post-intervention, p<0.001. Likewise, the use of plasma transfusion decreased significantly from 6.1% pre-intervention to 4.0% and 1.6% in the post-intervention years of 2005 and 2006 respectively, p<0.001. The duration of intravenous fluid therapy decreased from 3 days pre-intervention to 2.5 days (p<0.001) post-intervention; the length of hospital stay reduced from 4 days pre- to 3 days (p<0.001) post-intervention and the rate of intensive care admission from 5.8% pre to 2.6% and 2.5% post-intervention, p = 0.005. CONCLUSION: Cohorting adult dengue patients under a dedicated and trained team of doctors and nurses led to a substantial improvement in quality of care and clinical outcome.
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spelling pubmed-44574802015-06-09 Cohorting Dengue Patients Improves the Quality of Care and Clinical Outcome Lum, Lucy C. S. Syed Omar, Sharifah Faridah Sri La Sri Ponnampalavanar, Sasheela Tan, Lian H. Sekaran, Shamala Devi Kamarulzaman, Adeeba PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article INTRODUCTION: The increasing incidence of dengue among adults in Malaysia and other countries has important implications for health services. Before 2004, in order to cope with the surge in adult dengue admissions, each of the six medical wards in a university hospital took turns daily to admit and manage patients with dengue. Despite regular in-house training, the implementation of the WHO 1997 dengue case management guidelines by the multiple medical teams was piecemeal and resulted in high variability of care. A restructuring of adult dengue inpatient service in 2004 resulted in all patients being admitted to one ward under the care of the infectious disease unit. Hospital and Intensive Care Unit admission criteria, discharge criteria and clinical laboratory testing were maintained unchanged throughout the study period. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the impact of cohorting adult dengue patients on the quality of care and the clinical outcome in a university hospital in Malaysia. METHODS: A pre (2003) and post-intervention (2005–6) retrospective study was undertaken. INTERVENTION: Cohorting all dengue patients under the care of the Infectious Disease team in a designated ward in 2004. RESULTS: The number of patients enrolled was 352 in 2003, 785 in 2005 and 1158 in 2006. The evaluation and detection of haemorrhage remained high (>90%) and unchanged throughout the study period. The evaluation of plasma leakage increased from 35.4% pre-intervention to 78.8% post-intervention (p = <0.001) while its detection increased from 11.4% to 41.6% (p = <0.001). Examination for peripheral perfusion was undertaken in only 13.1% of patients pre-intervention, with a significant increase post-intervention, 18.6% and 34.2% respectively, p = <0.001. Pre-intervention, more patients had hypotension (21.5%) than detected peripheral hypoperfusion (11.4%), indicating that clinicians recognised shock only when patients developed hypotension. In contrast, post-intervention, clinicians recognised peripheral hypoperfusion as an early sign of shock. The highest haematocrit was significantly higher post-intervention but the lowest total white cell counts and platelet counts remained unchanged. A significant and progressive reduction in the use of platelet transfusions occurred, from 21.7% pre-intervention to 14.6% in 2005 and 5.2% in 2006 post-intervention, p<0.001. Likewise, the use of plasma transfusion decreased significantly from 6.1% pre-intervention to 4.0% and 1.6% in the post-intervention years of 2005 and 2006 respectively, p<0.001. The duration of intravenous fluid therapy decreased from 3 days pre-intervention to 2.5 days (p<0.001) post-intervention; the length of hospital stay reduced from 4 days pre- to 3 days (p<0.001) post-intervention and the rate of intensive care admission from 5.8% pre to 2.6% and 2.5% post-intervention, p = 0.005. CONCLUSION: Cohorting adult dengue patients under a dedicated and trained team of doctors and nurses led to a substantial improvement in quality of care and clinical outcome. Public Library of Science 2015-06-05 /pmc/articles/PMC4457480/ /pubmed/26047325 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0003836 Text en © 2015 Lum et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lum, Lucy C. S.
Syed Omar, Sharifah Faridah
Sri La Sri Ponnampalavanar, Sasheela
Tan, Lian H.
Sekaran, Shamala Devi
Kamarulzaman, Adeeba
Cohorting Dengue Patients Improves the Quality of Care and Clinical Outcome
title Cohorting Dengue Patients Improves the Quality of Care and Clinical Outcome
title_full Cohorting Dengue Patients Improves the Quality of Care and Clinical Outcome
title_fullStr Cohorting Dengue Patients Improves the Quality of Care and Clinical Outcome
title_full_unstemmed Cohorting Dengue Patients Improves the Quality of Care and Clinical Outcome
title_short Cohorting Dengue Patients Improves the Quality of Care and Clinical Outcome
title_sort cohorting dengue patients improves the quality of care and clinical outcome
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4457480/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26047325
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0003836
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