• CJEM · Nov 2023

    Impact of a high sensitivity troponin accelerated diagnostic protocol on the safety and emergency department length of stay of chest pain in an academic tertiary hospital: a quality improvement study.

    • Dana Phillips, Dominick Shelton, Aikta Verma, Samantha Liu, Vincent Yeung, and Ivy Cheng.
    • Department of Emergency Services, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Center, Toronto, ON, Canada. Dana.kozubal@gmail.com.
    • CJEM. 2023 Nov 1; 25 (11): 909919909-919.

    PurposeHigh-sensitivity troponin (hsTn) accelerated diagnostic protocols are highly recommended for evaluating acute coronary syndromes. Our goal was to improve care for chest pain patients through the safe adoption of an accelerated diagnostic protocol in our academic Emergency Department (ED) with an aim to reduce mean ED length of stay for chest pain patients by 1 h over 1.5 years. Pre-accelerated diagnostic protocol, our mean ED length of stay for chest pain patients was 9.0 h.MethodsUsing the Model for Improvement, we implemented a two-hour accelerated diagnostic protocol and conducted two Plan-Do-Study-Act cycles and education efforts to improve accelerated diagnostic protocol compliance and decrease ED length of stay. Using control charts, we measured the mean monthly ED length of stay for chest pain patients to look for special cause evidence of improvement. Process measures measured compliance with the accelerated diagnostic protocol. Balancing measures included the ED length of stay for abdominal pain patients and the number of admissions and deaths at 7 days for chest pain patients.ResultsMean ED length of stay for chest pain patients decreased from 9.0 to 8.2 h post-accelerated diagnostic protocol. The mean time between troponins decreased from 3.9 to 3.0 h, and the percentage of second troponins repeated at < 2.75 h increased from 22.3% to 58.6%. For abdominal pain patients, ED length of stay decreased from 10.8 to 10.5 h. No chest pain patients died within 7 days pre- or post-accelerated diagnostic protocol. Pre-accelerated diagnostic protocol, 0.84% (41/4,905) were admitted within 7 days. Post-accelerated diagnostic protocol and accelerated diagnostic protocol compliant, 0.70% (13/1,844) were admitted. Post-accelerated diagnostic protocol and accelerated diagnostic protocol non-compliant, 1.1% (13/1,183) were admitted.ConclusionWe safely introduced a hsTn accelerated diagnostic protocol in an academic ED. ED length of stay decreased for chest pain patients but did not meet our 1-h goal.© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians (CAEP)/ Association Canadienne de Médecine d'Urgence (ACMU).

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