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- Jessica A Schults, Karina R Charles, Johnny Millar, Claire M Rickard, Vineet Chopra, Anna Lake, Kristen Gibbons, Debbie Long, Sarfaraz Rahiman, Katrina Hutching, Jacinta Winderlich, Naomi E Spotswood, Amy Johansen, Paul Secombe, Georgina A Pizimolas, Quyen Tu, Michaela Waak, Meredith Allen, Brendan McMullan, Lisa Hall, and Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Society Paediatric Study Group.
- Herston Infectious Diseases Institute, Metro North Hospital and Health Service, Queensland, Australia.
- Crit Care Resusc. 2024 Jun 1; 26 (2): 717971-79.
IntroductionMonitoring healthcare quality is challenging in paediatric critical care due to measure variability, data collection burden, and uncertainty regarding consumer and clinician priorities.ObjectiveWe sought to establish a core quality measure set that (i) is meaningful to consumers and clinicians and (ii) promotes alignment of measure use and collection across paediatric critical care.DesignWe conducted a multi-stakeholder Delphi study with embedded consumer prioritisation survey. The Delphi involved two surveys, followed by a consensus meeting. Triangulation methods were used to integrate survey findings prior tobefore the consensus meeting. In the consensus panel, broad agreement was reached on a core measure set, and recommendations were made for future measurement directions in paediatric critical care.Setting And ParticipantsAustralian and New Zealand paediatric critical care survivors (aged >18 years) and families were invited to rank measure priorities in an online survey distributed via social media and consumer groups. A concurrent Delphi study was undertaken with paediatric critical care clinicians, policy makers, and a consumer representative.InterventionsNone.Main Outcome MeasuresPriorities for quality measures.ResultsRespondents to the consumer survey (n = 117) identified (i) nurse-patient ratios; (ii) visible patient goals; and (iii) long-term follow-up as their quality measure priorities. In the Delphi process, clinicians (Round 1 n = 191; Round 2 n = 117 [61% retention]; Round 3 n = 14) and a consumer representative reached broad agreement on a 51-item (61% of 83 initial measures) core measure set. Clinician priorities were (i) nurse-patient ratio; (ii) staff turnover; and (iii) long term-follow up. Measure feasibility was rated low due to a perceived lack of standardised case definitions or data collection burden. Five recommendations were generated.ConclusionsWe defined a 51-item core measurement set for paediatric critical care, aligned with clinician and consumer priorities. Next steps are implementation and methodological evaluation in quality programs, and where appropriate, retirement of redundant measures.© 2024 The Authors.
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