• Am J Emerg Med · Nov 2020

    Utilization of a multidisciplinary emergency department sepsis huddle to reduce time to antibiotics and improve SEP-1 compliance.

    • Jonathan D Sonis, Theodore I Benzer, Lauren Black, Michael R Filbin, Bryan D Hayes, Kathryn A Hibbert, Cassie Kraus, Ali S Raja, Elizabeth Temin, Maria Vareschi, Benjamin A White, Susan R Wilcox, and Emily L Aaronson.
    • Department of Emergency Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA. Electronic address: jonathan.sonis@mgh.harvard.edu.
    • Am J Emerg Med. 2020 Nov 1; 38 (11): 2400-2404.

    AbstractSepsis is a significant public health crisis in the United States, contributing to 50% of inpatient hospital deaths. Given its dramatic health effects and implications in the setting of new CMS care guidelines, ED leaders have renewed focus on appropriate and timely sepsis care, including timely administration of antibiotics in patients at risk for sepsis. Modeling the success of multidisciplinary bedside huddles in improving compliance with appropriate care in other healthcare settings, a Sepsis Huddle was implemented in a large, academic ED, with the goal of driving compliance with standardized sepsis care as described in the CMS SEP-1 measure. A retrospective cohort analysis was performed, with the primary finding that utilization of the Sepsis Huddle resulted in antibiotics being administered on average 41 min sooner than when the Sepsis Huddle was not performed. Given that literature suggests that early administration of appropriate antibiotic therapy is a major driver of mortality reduction in patients with sepsis, this study represents a proof of concept that utilization of a Sepsis Huddle may serve to improve outcomes among ED patients at risk for sepsis.Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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