Y. Zurynski, K. Churruca, G. Arnolda, S. Dalton, H. P. Ting, P. Hibbert, Charlotte J Molloy, L. Wiles, Carl de Wet, J. Braithwaite
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Results Five hundred and fourteen children had 696 visits for acute abdominal pain and adherence was assessed for 9785 individual indicators. The overall adherence was 69.9% (95% CI 64.8% to 74.6%). Adherence to individual indicators ranged from 21.6% for assessment of dehydration to 91.4% for appropriate ordering of imaging. Adherence was low for bundle A-History (29.4%) and bundle B-Examination (10.2%), and high for bundle C-Imaging (91.4%). Adherence to the 21 indicators overall was significantly lower in general practice (62.7%, 95% CI 57.0% to 68.1%) compared with ED (86.0%, 95% CI 83.4% to 88.4%; p<0.0001) and hospital inpatient settings (87.9%, 95% CI 83.1% to 91.8%; p<0.0001). Conclusions There was considerable variation in care quality for indicator bundles and care settings. Future work should explore how validated care quality indicator assessments can be embedded into clinical workflows to support continuous care quality improvement.","PeriodicalId":49653,"journal":{"name":"Quality & Safety in Health Care","volume":"29 1","pages":"509 - 516"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-11-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1136/bmjqs-2019-010088","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Quality of care for acute abdominal pain in children\",\"authors\":\"Y. Zurynski, K. Churruca, G. Arnolda, S. Dalton, H. P. Ting, P. Hibbert, Charlotte J Molloy, L. Wiles, Carl de Wet, J. Braithwaite\",\"doi\":\"10.1136/bmjqs-2019-010088\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Objective To assess quality of care for children presenting with acute abdominal pain using validated indicators. Design Audit of care quality for acute abdominal pain according to 21 care quality indicators developed and validated in four stages. Setting and participants Medical records of children aged 1–15 years receiving care in 2012–2013 were sampled from 57 general practitioners, 34 emergency departments (ED) and 28 hospitals across three Australian states; 6689 medical records were screened for visits for acute abdominal pain and audited by trained paediatric nurses. Outcome measures Adherence to 21 care quality indicators and three bundles of indicators: bundle A-History; bundle B-Examination; bundle C-Imaging. Results Five hundred and fourteen children had 696 visits for acute abdominal pain and adherence was assessed for 9785 individual indicators. The overall adherence was 69.9% (95% CI 64.8% to 74.6%). Adherence to individual indicators ranged from 21.6% for assessment of dehydration to 91.4% for appropriate ordering of imaging. Adherence was low for bundle A-History (29.4%) and bundle B-Examination (10.2%), and high for bundle C-Imaging (91.4%). Adherence to the 21 indicators overall was significantly lower in general practice (62.7%, 95% CI 57.0% to 68.1%) compared with ED (86.0%, 95% CI 83.4% to 88.4%; p<0.0001) and hospital inpatient settings (87.9%, 95% CI 83.1% to 91.8%; p<0.0001). Conclusions There was considerable variation in care quality for indicator bundles and care settings. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
目的使用经验证的指标评估儿童急性腹痛的护理质量。根据分四个阶段制定和验证的21项护理质量指标,对急性腹痛的护理质量进行设计审计。设定和参与者2012-2013年接受护理的1-15岁儿童的医疗记录是从澳大利亚三个州的57名全科医生、34个急诊科(ED)和28家医院抽取的;6689份医疗记录被筛查为急性腹痛就诊,并由受过培训的儿科护士进行审计。结果测量对21项护理质量指标和三组指标的遵守情况:A-History;束B检查;束C-Imaging。结果514名儿童因急性腹痛就诊696次,对9785项个体指标的依从性进行了评估。总体依从性为69.9%(95%CI 64.8%-74.6%)。对个别指标的依从性从评估脱水的21.6%到适当的成像顺序的91.4%不等。A束病史(29.4%)和B束检查(10.2%)的依从性较低,C束成像(91.4%)的依从率较高。全科医生对21项指标的总体依从性显著较低(62.7%,95% CI 57.0%至68.1%)与ED(86.0%、95% CI为83.4%~88.4%;p<0.0001)和医院住院环境(87.9%,95% CI 83.1%~91.8%;p<0.0001)。结论指标束和护理环境的护理质量存在相当大的差异。未来的工作应该探索如何将经过验证的护理质量指标评估嵌入临床工作流程,以支持持续的护理质量改进。
Quality of care for acute abdominal pain in children
Objective To assess quality of care for children presenting with acute abdominal pain using validated indicators. Design Audit of care quality for acute abdominal pain according to 21 care quality indicators developed and validated in four stages. Setting and participants Medical records of children aged 1–15 years receiving care in 2012–2013 were sampled from 57 general practitioners, 34 emergency departments (ED) and 28 hospitals across three Australian states; 6689 medical records were screened for visits for acute abdominal pain and audited by trained paediatric nurses. Outcome measures Adherence to 21 care quality indicators and three bundles of indicators: bundle A-History; bundle B-Examination; bundle C-Imaging. Results Five hundred and fourteen children had 696 visits for acute abdominal pain and adherence was assessed for 9785 individual indicators. The overall adherence was 69.9% (95% CI 64.8% to 74.6%). Adherence to individual indicators ranged from 21.6% for assessment of dehydration to 91.4% for appropriate ordering of imaging. Adherence was low for bundle A-History (29.4%) and bundle B-Examination (10.2%), and high for bundle C-Imaging (91.4%). Adherence to the 21 indicators overall was significantly lower in general practice (62.7%, 95% CI 57.0% to 68.1%) compared with ED (86.0%, 95% CI 83.4% to 88.4%; p<0.0001) and hospital inpatient settings (87.9%, 95% CI 83.1% to 91.8%; p<0.0001). Conclusions There was considerable variation in care quality for indicator bundles and care settings. Future work should explore how validated care quality indicator assessments can be embedded into clinical workflows to support continuous care quality improvement.