• Pediatric emergency care · Dec 2021

    Improving the Safety of an Emergency Department-Based Direct Admission Process at a Children's Hospital.

    • Tess Huy, Lia Lowrie, Robert Flood, Rebecca Chambers, Nancy Weiss, Keith Nordike, and David Wathen.
    • From the Department of Pediatrics, Divisions of General Academic Pediatrics and Pediatric Emergency Medicine for Saint Louis University.
    • Pediatr Emerg Care. 2021 Dec 1; 37 (12): e861e865e861-e865.

    ObjectivesDirect admission refers to admitting a patient to a unit avoiding usual entry points such as the emergency department. Inappropriate placement of direct admissions can result in rapid response activations, codes and unanticipated pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) transfers, which correlate with higher mortality and longer lengths of stay. The objective of the project was to improve the safety of the direct admission process as evidenced by decreasing the transfer of direct admission patients to the PICU within 6 hours.MethodsUtilizing the model for improvement, a multidisciplinary team was assembled to improve our screening process and reduce unanticipated direct admission-to-PICU transfers within 6 hours of arrival. Our emergency department-based direct admission process includes screening vital signs (temperature, heart rate, respiratory rate, blood pressure, and pulse oximetry) and a Pediatric Early Warning Score. Five Plan-Do-Study-Act cycles focused on role definition, improved documentation, referring facility and family awareness, improved visual management within the ED, and education of partner EMS and transport providers. The primary outcome was PICU transfer within 6 hours of direct admission arrival. Compliance with full screening was a process measure and number of direct admissions a balancing measure. Statistical process control charts and run charts were used to follow the measures.ResultsThe total number of direct admissions from January 2014 to the end of data collection, June 2018, was 3070 patients. Screening protocol compliance improved from 56% to over 80% for the entire hospital. Unanticipated direct admission-to-PICU transfers decreased from a baseline of 1 every 98 patients to a special cause of 1 in 1126 patients.ConclusionsBy utilizing QI methodology our team was able to implement and sustain a direct admission process that was more consistent, easier to document and improved the safety of our patients. Our study demonstrates that screening direct admissions reliably and consistently can decrease the rate of unanticipated transfer to a higher level of care.Copyright © 2020 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.

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