Madeleine Oster, Joshua D Thornsberry, Lindsay A Howard, Michele H Talley
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is an independent and modifiable risk factor for atrial fibrillation (AF) and correlates with a three-fold higher risk of incident AF. Although OSA is prevalent in patients with AF, it remains underdiagnosed. Guidelines for OSA screening are ambiguous.
Local problem: A small community hospital in the southeast United States lacked standardized OSA screening and consistent sleep clinic referral for hospitalized patients with AF.
Methods: Over 3 months, an OSA bundle (including screening, education, and referral) was implemented for hospitalized patients with AF. A retrospective electronic health record (EHR) review established a baseline comparison group. Descriptive analyses between the intervention and comparison groups evaluated the effectiveness of the OSA bundle.
Interventions: Eligible patients received OSA screening with the STOP-Bang questionnaire. A STOP-Bang score of 3 or higher triggered patient education about the arrhythmogenic relationship of OSA and AF. At discharge, patients received an ambulatory sleep clinic referral. After 3 months, an EHR review assessed the rate of sleep clinic follow-up, sleep testing, OSA diagnosis, and initiation of positive airway pressure.
Results: Of the 68 patients in the comparison group and 33 patients in the intervention group, the rate of OSA screening increased from 4.4% to 100%. Sleep clinic referral increased from 66.7% to 93.5%. Sleep clinic follow-up increased from 0% to 10%.
Conclusion: Screening for OSA and sleep clinic referral improved with the OSA bundle; however, sleep clinic follow-up remained low. Further quantitative and qualitative investigation is needed to better understand barriers to sleep clinic follow-up.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of the American Association of Nurse Practitioners (JAANP) is a monthly peer-reviewed professional journal that serves as the official publication of the American Association of Nurse Practitioners.
Published since 1989, the JAANP provides a strong clinical focus with articles related to primary, secondary, and tertiary care, nurse practitioner education, health policy, ethics and ethical issues, and health care delivery. The journal publishes original research, integrative/comprehensive reviews, case studies, a variety of topics in clinical practice, and theory-based articles related to patient and professional education. Although the majority of nurse practitioners function in primary care, there is an increasing focus on the provision of care across all types of systems from acute to long-term care settings.