To study the effect of an intervention on prevention of respiratory arrest and cardiopulmonary arrest (CPA) and to characterize ward CPAs by preceding signs and symptoms and initial cardiac rhythm.Design: A before-and-after interventional trial (12 months preintervention and 12 months postintervention).Setting: A tertiary care, academic children's hospital.Participants: Admitted patients who subsequently had either the code team or pediatric medical emergency team (PMET) called or who had a respiratory arrest or CPA on the wards.Intervention: Transition from a traditional code team to a PMET that responds to clinically deteriorating children in noncritical care areas.Outcome Measures: Combined rate of respiratory arrests and CPAs, rate of CPAs, and rate of respiratory ar-rests on the wards and agreement between independent reviewers on categorization of CPAs.
Introduction:Medication reconciliation can reduce medication discrepancies, errors, and patient harm. After a large academic hospital introduced a medication reconciliation software program, there was low compliance with electronic health record documentation of home medication reconciliation. This quality improvement project aimed to improve medication reconciliation on admission in 4 pediatric inpatient units by 50% over 3 months.Methods:We used Lean Sigma methodology to observe medication reconciliation processes; interview residents, nurses, pharmacists, and families; and perform swim lane process mapping and Ishikawa Cause and Effect analysis. The improvement plan included education and automated e-mails sent to admitting residents who had not completed medication reconciliation within 24 hours of admission. The daily percentage of patients without medication reconciliation within 24 hours of admission, indicated by the presence of old prescriptions in Sunrise Prescription Writer (RxWriter) (Allscripts Healthcare Solutions, Chicago, Ill.) from prior admissions, was assessed from March 2015-June 2016. We constructed statistical process control charts and identified special causes.Results:Key barriers included lack of knowledge about RxWriter and lack of accountability for completing medication reconciliation. The percentage of patients without medication reconciliation decreased from 32% at baseline to 22% with education (P < 0.001), to 15% with the use of automated e-mail reminders (P < 0.001). We sustained improvement over the following year. Statistical process control testing indicated shifts aligning with each stage of the study.Conclusion:Provider-tailored, automated e-mail reminders linked to electronic health record with educational training significantly improved resident compliance with use of an electronic tool for documentation of home medication reconciliation on hospital admission.
To prevent adverse drug events for pediatric patients, increase care provider efficiency, and reduce stress for care providers, a technology tool was developed that calculates medication dosage requirements during emergency situations. This article describes a simple low-cost technological solution for improving patient safety and care-provider assurance. Follow-up studies provide validation of the technology tool.
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