Cargando…

A quality improvement project on timely completion of bloods and ECGs on a tier 4 child and adolescent inpatient unit

AIMS: Physical health monitoring is paramount to optimal care for psychiatric patients. Blood tests and ECGs are invaluable tests throughout a patient's care. At baseline, they aid investigation of potential organic causes of psychiatric presentations and provide organ and electrolyte status be...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Salter, Emma, Snow, Philippa, Friel, Kiera, Biddiscombe, Nicola
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8770044/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2021.579
_version_ 1784635279012790272
author Salter, Emma
Snow, Philippa
Friel, Kiera
Biddiscombe, Nicola
author_facet Salter, Emma
Snow, Philippa
Friel, Kiera
Biddiscombe, Nicola
author_sort Salter, Emma
collection PubMed
description AIMS: Physical health monitoring is paramount to optimal care for psychiatric patients. Blood tests and ECGs are invaluable tests throughout a patient's care. At baseline, they aid investigation of potential organic causes of psychiatric presentations and provide organ and electrolyte status before starting medication. Common psychotropic medications carry physical health risks: bloods and ECGs aid in monitoring potential side effects of prescribed medication. In this local Tier 4 inpatient unit, anecdotal observation revealed completion of these basic investigations was noted to be suboptimal. This project aimed to improve timely completion of baseline (within 72 hours of admission) and monitoring (within one week of due date) bloods and ECGS. METHOD: This project was completed within a 12-bed child and adolescent inpatient unit. Using Plan Do Study Act (PDSA) methodology, the multidisciplinary team collated driver diagrams to identify potential areas for intervention. Following baseline analysis, colleague communication was considered key. Consequently, a chart for bloods and ECG completion was created. PDSA cycle 1: chart implementation. PDSA cycle 2: chart simplification and font size increase. PDSA cycle 3: allocated change in team leader for this cycle. PDSA cycle 4: Blood request pocket in office. PDSA cycle 5: chart simplification through removal of dates. PDSA cycle 6: ECG pocket. PDSA cycle 7: box on handover list. RESULT: Monthly investigations and admission numbers are unpredictable and inconsistent in this cohort: relevant case numbers per PDSA ranged from zero to ten. The results were presented as percentages to allow for direct comparison between cycles. Baseline and results of each consecutive PDSA cycle described above were as follows (N/A represents a cycle where no investigations were required): Admission bloods were completed within 72 hours in 50%, 100%, 50%, 80%, N/A, 100%, 100%, 100% Admission ECG was completed within 72 hours in 30%, 66%, 50%, 70%, N/A, 100%, 100%, 100% Monitoring bloods were completed within one week of due date in 25%, 33%, 0%, 80%, 100%, 100%, 100%, 100% Monitoring ECG was completed within one week of due date in 0%, 0%, N/A, 66%, 100%, 66%, N/A 100% CONCLUSION: Through close multidisciplinary collaboration and chart implementation, completion of bloods and ECGs improved. Low patient numbers per PDSA cycle resulted in large changes in percentage results, limiting the significance of these findings. Wider implementation of the chart within local Trust inpatient wards is considered.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8770044
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Cambridge University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-87700442022-01-31 A quality improvement project on timely completion of bloods and ECGs on a tier 4 child and adolescent inpatient unit Salter, Emma Snow, Philippa Friel, Kiera Biddiscombe, Nicola BJPsych Open Quality Improvement AIMS: Physical health monitoring is paramount to optimal care for psychiatric patients. Blood tests and ECGs are invaluable tests throughout a patient's care. At baseline, they aid investigation of potential organic causes of psychiatric presentations and provide organ and electrolyte status before starting medication. Common psychotropic medications carry physical health risks: bloods and ECGs aid in monitoring potential side effects of prescribed medication. In this local Tier 4 inpatient unit, anecdotal observation revealed completion of these basic investigations was noted to be suboptimal. This project aimed to improve timely completion of baseline (within 72 hours of admission) and monitoring (within one week of due date) bloods and ECGS. METHOD: This project was completed within a 12-bed child and adolescent inpatient unit. Using Plan Do Study Act (PDSA) methodology, the multidisciplinary team collated driver diagrams to identify potential areas for intervention. Following baseline analysis, colleague communication was considered key. Consequently, a chart for bloods and ECG completion was created. PDSA cycle 1: chart implementation. PDSA cycle 2: chart simplification and font size increase. PDSA cycle 3: allocated change in team leader for this cycle. PDSA cycle 4: Blood request pocket in office. PDSA cycle 5: chart simplification through removal of dates. PDSA cycle 6: ECG pocket. PDSA cycle 7: box on handover list. RESULT: Monthly investigations and admission numbers are unpredictable and inconsistent in this cohort: relevant case numbers per PDSA ranged from zero to ten. The results were presented as percentages to allow for direct comparison between cycles. Baseline and results of each consecutive PDSA cycle described above were as follows (N/A represents a cycle where no investigations were required): Admission bloods were completed within 72 hours in 50%, 100%, 50%, 80%, N/A, 100%, 100%, 100% Admission ECG was completed within 72 hours in 30%, 66%, 50%, 70%, N/A, 100%, 100%, 100% Monitoring bloods were completed within one week of due date in 25%, 33%, 0%, 80%, 100%, 100%, 100%, 100% Monitoring ECG was completed within one week of due date in 0%, 0%, N/A, 66%, 100%, 66%, N/A 100% CONCLUSION: Through close multidisciplinary collaboration and chart implementation, completion of bloods and ECGs improved. Low patient numbers per PDSA cycle resulted in large changes in percentage results, limiting the significance of these findings. Wider implementation of the chart within local Trust inpatient wards is considered. Cambridge University Press 2021-06-18 /pmc/articles/PMC8770044/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2021.579 Text en © The Author(s) 2021 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Quality Improvement
Salter, Emma
Snow, Philippa
Friel, Kiera
Biddiscombe, Nicola
A quality improvement project on timely completion of bloods and ECGs on a tier 4 child and adolescent inpatient unit
title A quality improvement project on timely completion of bloods and ECGs on a tier 4 child and adolescent inpatient unit
title_full A quality improvement project on timely completion of bloods and ECGs on a tier 4 child and adolescent inpatient unit
title_fullStr A quality improvement project on timely completion of bloods and ECGs on a tier 4 child and adolescent inpatient unit
title_full_unstemmed A quality improvement project on timely completion of bloods and ECGs on a tier 4 child and adolescent inpatient unit
title_short A quality improvement project on timely completion of bloods and ECGs on a tier 4 child and adolescent inpatient unit
title_sort quality improvement project on timely completion of bloods and ecgs on a tier 4 child and adolescent inpatient unit
topic Quality Improvement
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8770044/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2021.579
work_keys_str_mv AT salteremma aqualityimprovementprojectontimelycompletionofbloodsandecgsonatier4childandadolescentinpatientunit
AT snowphilippa aqualityimprovementprojectontimelycompletionofbloodsandecgsonatier4childandadolescentinpatientunit
AT frielkiera aqualityimprovementprojectontimelycompletionofbloodsandecgsonatier4childandadolescentinpatientunit
AT biddiscombenicola aqualityimprovementprojectontimelycompletionofbloodsandecgsonatier4childandadolescentinpatientunit
AT salteremma qualityimprovementprojectontimelycompletionofbloodsandecgsonatier4childandadolescentinpatientunit
AT snowphilippa qualityimprovementprojectontimelycompletionofbloodsandecgsonatier4childandadolescentinpatientunit
AT frielkiera qualityimprovementprojectontimelycompletionofbloodsandecgsonatier4childandadolescentinpatientunit
AT biddiscombenicola qualityimprovementprojectontimelycompletionofbloodsandecgsonatier4childandadolescentinpatientunit