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Interventions to Decrease Overuse of Cardiac Monitoring (Telemetry) When Transitioning from the Intensive Care Unit to the Regular Nursing Floor

Background Cardiac monitoring (telemetry) is a common over-utilized hospital resource in the United States. Previous studies have shown that telemetry does not improve outcomes for low-risk patients. Inappropriate utilization occurs because of lack of awareness of guideline-based indications or non-...

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Autores principales: Chahine, Johnny, Thapa, Bicky, Gosai, Falgun, Abdelghaffar, Bahaa, Al Ashi, Suleiman I, Maroo, Anjli, Alappan, Narendrakumar, Gopalakrishna, K V
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6538103/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31183291
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.4311
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author Chahine, Johnny
Thapa, Bicky
Gosai, Falgun
Abdelghaffar, Bahaa
Al Ashi, Suleiman I
Maroo, Anjli
Alappan, Narendrakumar
Gopalakrishna, K V
author_facet Chahine, Johnny
Thapa, Bicky
Gosai, Falgun
Abdelghaffar, Bahaa
Al Ashi, Suleiman I
Maroo, Anjli
Alappan, Narendrakumar
Gopalakrishna, K V
author_sort Chahine, Johnny
collection PubMed
description Background Cardiac monitoring (telemetry) is a common over-utilized hospital resource in the United States. Previous studies have shown that telemetry does not improve outcomes for low-risk patients. Inappropriate utilization occurs because of lack of awareness of guideline-based indications or non-adherence to known indications. Objective A quality improvement study was conducted to reduce telemetry overutilization during the transition of care from the intensive care unit (ICU) by 15% through increasing awareness of indications for telemetry. Methods The study cohort included patients originally admitted to the ICU for sepsis who had improved and were stable for transfer to a non-ICU setting. Subjects were identified and included during pre-intervention (six weeks) and intervention (six weeks) periods. Resident physicians and nurse practitioners were targeted using multiple modalities of education: didactic lectures during week one, poster demonstrations during week three, and video presentations during week five. Results A total of 246 study subjects during the pre-intervention and 94 study subjects in the intervention period were studied; 187 of the 246 subjects in the pre-intervention arm (76%) and 58 of the 94 subjects in the intervention arm (61.7%) were transferred with telemetry. Telemetry utilization dropped by 23.1% at the end of the intervention period. Conclusion Educating the caregivers about the indications for telemetry led to a decrease in over-utilization of telemetry on the transition of care from the ICU to the regular nursing floor. Repetitive and multi-modality educational interventions were effective tools and associated with increased adherence to established guidelines for telemetry usage.
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spelling pubmed-65381032019-06-10 Interventions to Decrease Overuse of Cardiac Monitoring (Telemetry) When Transitioning from the Intensive Care Unit to the Regular Nursing Floor Chahine, Johnny Thapa, Bicky Gosai, Falgun Abdelghaffar, Bahaa Al Ashi, Suleiman I Maroo, Anjli Alappan, Narendrakumar Gopalakrishna, K V Cureus Cardiology Background Cardiac monitoring (telemetry) is a common over-utilized hospital resource in the United States. Previous studies have shown that telemetry does not improve outcomes for low-risk patients. Inappropriate utilization occurs because of lack of awareness of guideline-based indications or non-adherence to known indications. Objective A quality improvement study was conducted to reduce telemetry overutilization during the transition of care from the intensive care unit (ICU) by 15% through increasing awareness of indications for telemetry. Methods The study cohort included patients originally admitted to the ICU for sepsis who had improved and were stable for transfer to a non-ICU setting. Subjects were identified and included during pre-intervention (six weeks) and intervention (six weeks) periods. Resident physicians and nurse practitioners were targeted using multiple modalities of education: didactic lectures during week one, poster demonstrations during week three, and video presentations during week five. Results A total of 246 study subjects during the pre-intervention and 94 study subjects in the intervention period were studied; 187 of the 246 subjects in the pre-intervention arm (76%) and 58 of the 94 subjects in the intervention arm (61.7%) were transferred with telemetry. Telemetry utilization dropped by 23.1% at the end of the intervention period. Conclusion Educating the caregivers about the indications for telemetry led to a decrease in over-utilization of telemetry on the transition of care from the ICU to the regular nursing floor. Repetitive and multi-modality educational interventions were effective tools and associated with increased adherence to established guidelines for telemetry usage. Cureus 2019-03-25 /pmc/articles/PMC6538103/ /pubmed/31183291 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.4311 Text en Copyright © 2019, Chahine et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ 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 credited.
spellingShingle Cardiology
Chahine, Johnny
Thapa, Bicky
Gosai, Falgun
Abdelghaffar, Bahaa
Al Ashi, Suleiman I
Maroo, Anjli
Alappan, Narendrakumar
Gopalakrishna, K V
Interventions to Decrease Overuse of Cardiac Monitoring (Telemetry) When Transitioning from the Intensive Care Unit to the Regular Nursing Floor
title Interventions to Decrease Overuse of Cardiac Monitoring (Telemetry) When Transitioning from the Intensive Care Unit to the Regular Nursing Floor
title_full Interventions to Decrease Overuse of Cardiac Monitoring (Telemetry) When Transitioning from the Intensive Care Unit to the Regular Nursing Floor
title_fullStr Interventions to Decrease Overuse of Cardiac Monitoring (Telemetry) When Transitioning from the Intensive Care Unit to the Regular Nursing Floor
title_full_unstemmed Interventions to Decrease Overuse of Cardiac Monitoring (Telemetry) When Transitioning from the Intensive Care Unit to the Regular Nursing Floor
title_short Interventions to Decrease Overuse of Cardiac Monitoring (Telemetry) When Transitioning from the Intensive Care Unit to the Regular Nursing Floor
title_sort interventions to decrease overuse of cardiac monitoring (telemetry) when transitioning from the intensive care unit to the regular nursing floor
topic Cardiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6538103/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31183291
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.4311
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