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Quality and Safety Challenges in Inpatient Pediatric Care during the COVID‐19 Pandemic: A National Qualitative Study

RESEARCH OBJECTIVE: The COVID‐19 pandemic has necessitated rapid changes in healthcare delivery, including surge planning and modifying healthcare delivery environments and practices. Our objective was to identify the major resulting challenges for quality and safety of pediatric inpatient care. STU...

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Autores principales: De Angulo, Nadia Roessler, Penwill, Nicole, Pathak, Priya, Elster, Martha, Ja, Clairissa, Hochreiter, Daniela, Wilson, Karen, Newton, Jacqueline, Kaiser, Sunitha
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8441396/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1475-6773.13819
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author De Angulo, Nadia Roessler
Penwill, Nicole
Pathak, Priya
Elster, Martha
Ja, Clairissa
Hochreiter, Daniela
Wilson, Karen
Newton, Jacqueline
Kaiser, Sunitha
author_facet De Angulo, Nadia Roessler
Penwill, Nicole
Pathak, Priya
Elster, Martha
Ja, Clairissa
Hochreiter, Daniela
Wilson, Karen
Newton, Jacqueline
Kaiser, Sunitha
author_sort De Angulo, Nadia Roessler
collection PubMed
description RESEARCH OBJECTIVE: The COVID‐19 pandemic has necessitated rapid changes in healthcare delivery, including surge planning and modifying healthcare delivery environments and practices. Our objective was to identify the major resulting challenges for quality and safety of pediatric inpatient care. STUDY DESIGN: We conducted semi‐structured video interviews. Using constant comparative methods, we iteratively coded data to identify themes related to pediatric inpatient quality and safety challenges during the pandemic. POPULATION STUDIED: We purposefully sampled from community and children's hospitals serving pediatric patients in the 6 U.S. states with the highest COVID‐19 hospitalization rates at the onset of the pandemic (NY, NJ, DC, MA, CT, LA). We recruited 2 front‐line clinicians per site (mix of administrators, nurses, physicians). PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Twenty‐four participants from 12 hospitals were interviewed. The most commonly encountered themes are detailed in Table 1. Changes in healthcare delivery practices potentially impacting quality and safety of inpatient pediatric care included: 1) limits on family and caregiver visitation, which may have hindered gathering important details for diagnosis and engaging in shared‐decision making about management; 2) personal protective equipment and isolation practices, which may have compromised effective communication with caregivers and interpreters; 3) changes in quality improvement (QI) infrastructure and activities, with potential decreases in monitoring and safety efforts; 4) difficulties defining and providing high‐quality care for children with COVID‐19 and multi‐system inflammatory syndrome in children, both novel diagnoses; and 5) potential increases in safety events due to decreased direct contact with patients and monitoring (e.g., wound infections, central line‐associated bloodstream infections and catheter‐associated urinary tract infections). CONCLUSIONS: This national qualitative study of early COVID‐19 epicenters described changes in several domains of healthcare delivery affecting quality and safety of pediatric inpatient care. IMPLICATIONS FOR POLICY OR PRACTICE: The several potential areas of focus identified can help clinicians and hospital leaders plan for safe and high‐quality care for hospitalized children, during this ongoing crisis and for future pandemics. PRIMARY FUNDING SOURCE: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
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spelling pubmed-84413962021-12-08 Quality and Safety Challenges in Inpatient Pediatric Care during the COVID‐19 Pandemic: A National Qualitative Study De Angulo, Nadia Roessler Penwill, Nicole Pathak, Priya Elster, Martha Ja, Clairissa Hochreiter, Daniela Wilson, Karen Newton, Jacqueline Kaiser, Sunitha Health Serv Res Special Issue Abstract RESEARCH OBJECTIVE: The COVID‐19 pandemic has necessitated rapid changes in healthcare delivery, including surge planning and modifying healthcare delivery environments and practices. Our objective was to identify the major resulting challenges for quality and safety of pediatric inpatient care. STUDY DESIGN: We conducted semi‐structured video interviews. Using constant comparative methods, we iteratively coded data to identify themes related to pediatric inpatient quality and safety challenges during the pandemic. POPULATION STUDIED: We purposefully sampled from community and children's hospitals serving pediatric patients in the 6 U.S. states with the highest COVID‐19 hospitalization rates at the onset of the pandemic (NY, NJ, DC, MA, CT, LA). We recruited 2 front‐line clinicians per site (mix of administrators, nurses, physicians). PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Twenty‐four participants from 12 hospitals were interviewed. The most commonly encountered themes are detailed in Table 1. Changes in healthcare delivery practices potentially impacting quality and safety of inpatient pediatric care included: 1) limits on family and caregiver visitation, which may have hindered gathering important details for diagnosis and engaging in shared‐decision making about management; 2) personal protective equipment and isolation practices, which may have compromised effective communication with caregivers and interpreters; 3) changes in quality improvement (QI) infrastructure and activities, with potential decreases in monitoring and safety efforts; 4) difficulties defining and providing high‐quality care for children with COVID‐19 and multi‐system inflammatory syndrome in children, both novel diagnoses; and 5) potential increases in safety events due to decreased direct contact with patients and monitoring (e.g., wound infections, central line‐associated bloodstream infections and catheter‐associated urinary tract infections). CONCLUSIONS: This national qualitative study of early COVID‐19 epicenters described changes in several domains of healthcare delivery affecting quality and safety of pediatric inpatient care. IMPLICATIONS FOR POLICY OR PRACTICE: The several potential areas of focus identified can help clinicians and hospital leaders plan for safe and high‐quality care for hospitalized children, during this ongoing crisis and for future pandemics. PRIMARY FUNDING SOURCE: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2021-09-15 2021-09 /pmc/articles/PMC8441396/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1475-6773.13819 Text en © 2021 Health Research and Educational Trust
spellingShingle Special Issue Abstract
De Angulo, Nadia Roessler
Penwill, Nicole
Pathak, Priya
Elster, Martha
Ja, Clairissa
Hochreiter, Daniela
Wilson, Karen
Newton, Jacqueline
Kaiser, Sunitha
Quality and Safety Challenges in Inpatient Pediatric Care during the COVID‐19 Pandemic: A National Qualitative Study
title Quality and Safety Challenges in Inpatient Pediatric Care during the COVID‐19 Pandemic: A National Qualitative Study
title_full Quality and Safety Challenges in Inpatient Pediatric Care during the COVID‐19 Pandemic: A National Qualitative Study
title_fullStr Quality and Safety Challenges in Inpatient Pediatric Care during the COVID‐19 Pandemic: A National Qualitative Study
title_full_unstemmed Quality and Safety Challenges in Inpatient Pediatric Care during the COVID‐19 Pandemic: A National Qualitative Study
title_short Quality and Safety Challenges in Inpatient Pediatric Care during the COVID‐19 Pandemic: A National Qualitative Study
title_sort quality and safety challenges in inpatient pediatric care during the covid‐19 pandemic: a national qualitative study
topic Special Issue Abstract
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8441396/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1475-6773.13819
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