Multisite, quality-improvement collaboration to optimise cardiac care in Queensland public hospitals


Autoria(s): Scott, Ian A.; Darwin, Irene C.; Harvey, Kathy H.; Duke, Andy B.; Buckmaster, Nicholas D.; Atherton, John; Harden, Hazel; Ward, Michael
Contribuinte(s)

M. Van Der Weyden

Data(s)

01/01/2004

Resumo

Objective: To evaluate changes in quality of in-hospital care of patients with either acute coronary syndromes (ACS) or congestive heart failure (CHF) admitted to hospitals participating in a multisite quality improvement collaboration. Design: Before-and-after study of changes in quality indicators measured on representative patient samples between June 2001 and January 2003. Setting: Nine public hospitals in Queensland. Study populations: Consecutive or randomly selected patients admitted to study hospitals during the baseline period (June 2001 to January 2002; n = 807 for ACS, n = 357 for CHF) and post-intervention period (July 2002 to January 2003; n = 717 for ACS, n = 220 for CHF). Intervention: Provision of comparative baseline feedback at a facilitative workshop combined with hospital-specific quality-improvement interventions supported by on-site quality officers and a central program management group. Main outcome measure: Changes in process-of-care indicators between baseline and post-intervention periods. Results: Compared with baseline, more patients with ACS in the post-intervention period received therapeutic heparin regimens (84% v 72%; P < 0.001), angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (64% v 56%; P = 0.02), lipid-lowering agents (72% v 62%; P < 0.001), early use of coronary angiography (52% v 39%; P < 0.001), in-hospital cardiac counselling (65% v 43%; P < 0.001), and referral to cardiac rehabilitation (15% v 5%; P < 0.001). The numbers of patients with CHF receiving β-blockers also increased (52% v 34%; P < 0.001), with fewer patients receiving deleterious agents (13% v 23%; P = 0.04). Same-cause 30-day readmission rate decreased from 7.2% to 2.4% (P = 0.02) in patients with CHF. Conclusion: Quality-improvement interventions conducted as multisite collaborations may improve in-hospital care of acute cardiac conditions within relatively short time frames.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:70160

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Australasian Medical Publishing

Palavras-Chave #Medicine, General & Internal #Acute Myocardial-infarction #Acute Coronary Syndromes #Randomized Controlled-trial #Congestive-heart-failure #Of-care #Global Registry #Management #Guidelines #Project #Grace #C1 #321208 Primary Health Care #730299 Public health not elsewhere classified #11 Medical and Health Sciences
Tipo

Journal Article