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- Todd W Lyons, Anne M Stack, Michael C Monuteaux, Stephanie L Parver, Catherine R Gordon, Caroline D Gordon, Mark R Proctor, and Lise E Nigrovic.
- Divison of Emergency Medicine, and todd.lyons@childrens.harvard.edu.
- Pediatrics. 2016 Jun 1; 137 (6).
Background And ObjectiveAlthough children with isolated skull fractures rarely require acute interventions, most are hospitalized. Our aim was to safely decrease the hospitalization rate for children with isolated skull fractures.MethodsWe designed and executed this multifaceted quality improvement (QI) initiative between January 2008 and July 2015 to reduce hospitalization rates for children ≤21 years old with isolated skull fractures at a single tertiary care pediatric institution. We defined an isolated skull fracture as a skull fracture without intracranial injury. The QI intervention consisted of 2 steps: (1) development and implementation of an evidence-based guideline, and (2) dissemination of a provider survey designed to reinforce guideline awareness and adherence. Our primary outcome was hospitalization rate and our balancing measure was hospital readmission within 72 hours. We used standard statistical process control methodology to assess change over time. To assess for secular trends, we examined admission rates for children with an isolated skull fracture in the Pediatric Health Information System administrative database.ResultsWe identified 321 children with an isolated skull fracture with a median age of 11 months (interquartile range 5-16 months). The baseline admission rate was 71% (179/249, 95% confidence interval, 66%-77%) and decreased to 46% (34/72, 95% confidence interval, 35%-60%) after implementation of our QI initiative. No child was readmitted after discharge. The admission rate in our secular trend control group remained unchanged at 78%.ConclusionsWe safely reduced the hospitalization rate for children with isolated skull fractures without an increase in the readmissions.Copyright © 2016 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.
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