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Qual Saf Health Care · Dec 2010
Pneumococcal vaccination process improvement in an acute care setting.
- Abigail M Yancey, Anne B Jundt, and Kathryn J Nelson.
- Department of Pharmacy Practice, St Louis College of Pharmacy, St Louis, Missouri 63110-1088, USA. ayancey@stlcop.edu
- Qual Saf Health Care. 2010 Dec 1; 19 (6): e61.
Background And ObjectiveDespite the availability of the pneumococcal vaccine since 1977, the vaccine is greatly underutilised. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, The Joint Commission and Healthy People 2010 have all listed the administration of the pneumococcal vaccine before hospital discharge as a standard of care and a quality initiative in the 21st century. SSM St Mary's Health Center chartered a multidisciplinary team to address a disappointing pneumococcal vaccination rate of 34.7% in the first quarter of 2005.MethodsThe team utilised the improvement model of Plan-Do-Study-Act to implement and monitor process changes. Changes were made to four key steps in the pneumococcal vaccination process: assessment, ordering, obtaining and administering. The team also implemented a concurrent review process. The team tracked the hospital's pneumococcal vaccination rate per the published Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and The Joint Commission guidelines.ResultsOver a 2-year period, the vaccination rate of pneumonia patients has improved incrementally from 34.7% and is now consistently greater than 90%.ConclusionUtilising Plan-Do-Study-Act allows for continual improvement of the vaccination process. Multiple cycles are necessary to achieve standardisation and optimal process flow.
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