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Antipsychotic Monitoring Within the Home Treatment Team in the Southern Trust, a Quality Improvement Project

AIMS: The Royal College of Psychiatrists has a specialist group called the Home Treatment Accreditation Scheme (HTAS) that has published a set of best practice recommendations for Home Treatment Crisis Response (HTCR) teams across the UK. As of yet, the HTCR team in the Southern Trust is not accredi...

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Autores principales: Andress, Cedar, Coulter, Paul, Watson, Leah
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9378063/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2022.270
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author Andress, Cedar
Coulter, Paul
Watson, Leah
author_facet Andress, Cedar
Coulter, Paul
Watson, Leah
author_sort Andress, Cedar
collection PubMed
description AIMS: The Royal College of Psychiatrists has a specialist group called the Home Treatment Accreditation Scheme (HTAS) that has published a set of best practice recommendations for Home Treatment Crisis Response (HTCR) teams across the UK. As of yet, the HTCR team in the Southern Trust is not accredited. We decided to focus our project on antipsychotic monitoring. SMART aim: All patients (100%) within the HTCR team commenced on antipsychotics are receiving an appropriate level of blood and physical monitoring as recommended by guidelines and these are being documented correctly within 10 days of discharge. METHODS: PLAN HTAS standards were reviewed alongside NICE guidelines on antipsychotic monitoring and a pro forma created. We collected baseline data on patients commenced on treatment dose antipsychotics in the HTCR team and assessed completion of bloods/ECGs/physical parameters and documentation. DO Our intervention for PSDA cycle 1 was to educate members of the multi- disciplinary team (MDT) via a presentation after the baseline data were analysed. We looked at correct documentation and how to fix common mistakes identified. We asked staff for their input on how to improve outcomes. Posters were printed off for guidance. We collected data after this intervention using the same pro forma. STUDY We analysed the results from PSDA cycle 1, comparing them to baseline results. ACT Our next step in PDSA cycle 2 would be to focus on continuing to improve poorer results such as prolactin levels and ECGs, with input from the MDT. RESULTS: Baseline data showed between a 14% and 59% completion rate for various baseline bloods, 68–72% completion rate for heart rate (HR)/blood pressure (BP)/weight and a 36% completion rate for ECGs. Following PDSA cycle 1, this improved to between a 55–100% completion rate for baseline bloods, a 91% completion rate for HR/BP/weight and a 64% completion rate for ECGs. Baseline documentation of these parameters was correctly recorded between 9–68% of the time. This overall improved after PSDA cycle 1 to 18–73%. CONCLUSION: Our intervention from PDSA cycle 1 improved completion of bloods, physical parameters and ECGs in the HTCR team. Documentation also improved in all domains. Our next step in PDSA cycle 2 would be to focus on continuing to improve poorer results, looking at altering practicalities that may have affected those areas.
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spelling pubmed-93780632022-08-18 Antipsychotic Monitoring Within the Home Treatment Team in the Southern Trust, a Quality Improvement Project Andress, Cedar Coulter, Paul Watson, Leah BJPsych Open Quality Improvement AIMS: The Royal College of Psychiatrists has a specialist group called the Home Treatment Accreditation Scheme (HTAS) that has published a set of best practice recommendations for Home Treatment Crisis Response (HTCR) teams across the UK. As of yet, the HTCR team in the Southern Trust is not accredited. We decided to focus our project on antipsychotic monitoring. SMART aim: All patients (100%) within the HTCR team commenced on antipsychotics are receiving an appropriate level of blood and physical monitoring as recommended by guidelines and these are being documented correctly within 10 days of discharge. METHODS: PLAN HTAS standards were reviewed alongside NICE guidelines on antipsychotic monitoring and a pro forma created. We collected baseline data on patients commenced on treatment dose antipsychotics in the HTCR team and assessed completion of bloods/ECGs/physical parameters and documentation. DO Our intervention for PSDA cycle 1 was to educate members of the multi- disciplinary team (MDT) via a presentation after the baseline data were analysed. We looked at correct documentation and how to fix common mistakes identified. We asked staff for their input on how to improve outcomes. Posters were printed off for guidance. We collected data after this intervention using the same pro forma. STUDY We analysed the results from PSDA cycle 1, comparing them to baseline results. ACT Our next step in PDSA cycle 2 would be to focus on continuing to improve poorer results such as prolactin levels and ECGs, with input from the MDT. RESULTS: Baseline data showed between a 14% and 59% completion rate for various baseline bloods, 68–72% completion rate for heart rate (HR)/blood pressure (BP)/weight and a 36% completion rate for ECGs. Following PDSA cycle 1, this improved to between a 55–100% completion rate for baseline bloods, a 91% completion rate for HR/BP/weight and a 64% completion rate for ECGs. Baseline documentation of these parameters was correctly recorded between 9–68% of the time. This overall improved after PSDA cycle 1 to 18–73%. CONCLUSION: Our intervention from PDSA cycle 1 improved completion of bloods, physical parameters and ECGs in the HTCR team. Documentation also improved in all domains. Our next step in PDSA cycle 2 would be to focus on continuing to improve poorer results, looking at altering practicalities that may have affected those areas. Cambridge University Press 2022-06-20 /pmc/articles/PMC9378063/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2022.270 Text en © The Author(s) 2022 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://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
Andress, Cedar
Coulter, Paul
Watson, Leah
Antipsychotic Monitoring Within the Home Treatment Team in the Southern Trust, a Quality Improvement Project
title Antipsychotic Monitoring Within the Home Treatment Team in the Southern Trust, a Quality Improvement Project
title_full Antipsychotic Monitoring Within the Home Treatment Team in the Southern Trust, a Quality Improvement Project
title_fullStr Antipsychotic Monitoring Within the Home Treatment Team in the Southern Trust, a Quality Improvement Project
title_full_unstemmed Antipsychotic Monitoring Within the Home Treatment Team in the Southern Trust, a Quality Improvement Project
title_short Antipsychotic Monitoring Within the Home Treatment Team in the Southern Trust, a Quality Improvement Project
title_sort antipsychotic monitoring within the home treatment team in the southern trust, a quality improvement project
topic Quality Improvement
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9378063/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2022.270
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