2681. Nurse-patient ratios as a patient safety strategy: a systematic review.
A small percentage of patients die during hospitalization or shortly thereafter, and it is widely believed that more or better nursing care could prevent some of these deaths. The author systematically reviewed the evidence about nurse staffing ratios and in-hospital death through September 2012. From 550 titles, 87 articles were reviewed and 15 new studies that augmented the 2 existing reviews were selected. The strongest evidence supporting a causal relationship between higher nurse staffing levels and decreased inpatient mortality comes from a longitudinal study in a single hospital that carefully accounted for nurse staffing and patient comorbid conditions and a meta-analysis that found a "dose-response relationship" in observational studies of nurse staffing and death. No studies reported any serious harms associated with an increase in nurse staffing. Limiting any stronger conclusions is the lack of an evaluation of an intervention to increase nurse staffing ratios. The formal costs of increasing the nurse-patient ratio cannot be calculated because there has been no evaluation of an intentional change in nurse staffing to improve patient outcomes.
2682. Medication reconciliation during transitions of care as a patient safety strategy: a systematic review.
作者: Janice L Kwan.;Lisha Lo.;Margaret Sampson.;Kaveh G Shojania.
来源: Ann Intern Med. 2013年158卷5 Pt 2期397-403页
Medication reconciliation identifies and resolves unintentional discrepancies between patients' medication lists across transitions in care. The purpose of this review is to summarize evidence about the effectiveness of hospital-based medication reconciliation interventions. Searches encompassed MEDLINE through November 2012 and EMBASE and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials through July 2012. Eligible studies evaluated the effects of hospital-based medication reconciliation on unintentional discrepancies with nontrivial risks for harm to patients or 30-day postdischarge emergency department visits and readmission. Two reviewers evaluated study eligibility, abstracted data, and assessed study quality. Eighteen studies evaluating 20 interventions met the selection criteria. Pharmacists performed medication reconciliation in 17 of the 20 interventions. Most unintentional discrepancies identified had no clinical significance. Medication reconciliation alone probably does not reduce postdischarge hospital utilization but may do so when bundled with interventions aimed at improving care transitions.
2683. Inpatient fall prevention programs as a patient safety strategy: a systematic review.
作者: Isomi M Miake-Lye.;Susanne Hempel.;David A Ganz.;Paul G Shekelle.
来源: Ann Intern Med. 2013年158卷5 Pt 2期390-6页
Falls are common among inpatients. Several reviews, including 4 meta-analyses involving 19 studies, show that multicomponent programs to prevent falls among inpatients reduce relative risk for falls by as much as 30%. The purpose of this updated review is to reassess the benefits and harms of fall prevention programs in acute care settings and to identify factors associated with successful implementation of these programs. We searched for new evidence using PubMed from 2005 to September 2012. Two new, large, randomized, controlled trials supported the conclusions of the existing meta-analyses. An optimal bundle of components was not identified. Harms were not systematically examined, but potential harms included increased use of restraints and sedating drugs and decreased efforts to mobilize patients. Eleven studies showed that the following themes were associated with successful implementation: leadership support, engagement of front-line staff in program design, guidance of the prevention program by a multidisciplinary committee, pilot-testing interventions, use of information technology systems to provide data about falls, staff education and training, and changes in nihilistic attitudes about fall prevention. Future research would advance knowledge by identifying optimal bundles of component interventions for particular patients and by determining whether effectiveness relies more on the mix of the components or use of certain implementation strategies.
2684. Patient safety strategies targeted at diagnostic errors: a systematic review.
作者: Kathryn M McDonald.;Brian Matesic.;Despina G Contopoulos-Ioannidis.;Julia Lonhart.;Eric Schmidt.;Noelle Pineda.;John P A Ioannidis.
来源: Ann Intern Med. 2013年158卷5 Pt 2期381-9页
Missed, delayed, or incorrect diagnosis can lead to inappropriate patient care, poor patient outcomes, and increased cost. This systematic review analyzed evaluations of interventions to prevent diagnostic errors. Searches used MEDLINE (1966 to October 2012), the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality's Patient Safety Network, bibliographies, and prior systematic reviews. Studies that evaluated any intervention to decrease diagnostic errors in any clinical setting and with any study design were eligible, provided that they addressed a patient-related outcome. Two independent reviewers extracted study data and rated study quality. There were 109 studies that addressed 1 or more intervention categories: personnel changes (n = 6), educational interventions (n = 11), technique (n = 23), structured process changes (n = 27), technology-based systems interventions (n = 32), and review methods (n = 38). Of 14 randomized trials, which were rated as having mostly low to moderate risk of bias, 11 reported interventions that reduced diagnostic errors. Evidence seemed strongest for technology-based systems (for example, text message alerting) and specific techniques (for example, testing equipment adaptations). Studies provided no information on harms, cost, or contextual application of interventions. Overall, the review showed a growing field of diagnostic error research and categorized and identified promising interventions that warrant evaluation in large studies across diverse settings.
2685. In-facility delirium prevention programs as a patient safety strategy: a systematic review.
Delirium, an acute decline in attention and cognition, occurs among hospitalized patients at rates estimated to range from 14% to 56% and increases the risk for morbidity and mortality. The purpose of this systematic review was to evaluate the effectiveness and safety of in-facility multicomponent delirium prevention programs. A search of 6 databases (including MEDLINE, EMBASE, and CINAHL) was conducted through September 2012. Randomized, controlled trials; controlled clinical trials; interrupted time series; and controlled before-after studies with a prospective postintervention portion were eligible for inclusion. The evidence from 19 studies that met the inclusion criteria suggests that most multicomponent interventions are effective in preventing onset of delirium in at-risk patients in a hospital setting. Evidence was insufficient to determine the benefit of such programs in other care settings. Future comparative effectiveness studies with standardized protocols are needed to identify which components in multicomponent interventions are most effective for delirium prevention.
2686. Promoting a culture of safety as a patient safety strategy: a systematic review.
作者: Sallie J Weaver.;Lisa H Lubomksi.;Renee F Wilson.;Elizabeth R Pfoh.;Kathryn A Martinez.;Sydney M Dy.
来源: Ann Intern Med. 2013年158卷5 Pt 2期369-74页
Developing a culture of safety is a core element of many efforts to improve patient safety and care quality. This systematic review identifies and assesses interventions used to promote safety culture or climate in acute care settings. The authors searched MEDLINE, CINAHL, PsycINFO, Cochrane, and EMBASE to identify relevant English-language studies published from January 2000 to October 2012. They selected studies that targeted health care workers practicing in inpatient settings and included data about change in patient safety culture or climate after a targeted intervention. Two raters independently screened 3679 abstracts (which yielded 33 eligible studies in 35 articles), extracted study data, and rated study quality and strength of evidence. Eight studies included executive walk rounds or interdisciplinary rounds; 8 evaluated multicomponent, unit-based interventions; and 20 included team training or communication initiatives. Twenty-nine studies reported some improvement in safety culture or patient outcomes, but measured outcomes were highly heterogeneous. Strength of evidence was low, and most studies were pre-post evaluations of low to moderate quality. Within these limits, evidence suggests that interventions can improve perceptions of safety culture and potentially reduce patient harm.
2687. The top patient safety strategies that can be encouraged for adoption now.
作者: Paul G Shekelle.;Peter J Pronovost.;Robert M Wachter.;Kathryn M McDonald.;Karen Schoelles.;Sydney M Dy.;Kaveh Shojania.;James T Reston.;Alyce S Adams.;Peter B Angood.;David W Bates.;Leonard Bickman.;Pascale Carayon.;Liam Donaldson.;Naihua Duan.;Donna O Farley.;Trisha Greenhalgh.;John L Haughom.;Eileen Lake.;Richard Lilford.;Kathleen N Lohr.;Gregg S Meyer.;Marlene R Miller.;Duncan V Neuhauser.;Gery Ryan.;Sanjay Saint.;Stephen M Shortell.;David P Stevens.;Kieran Walshe.
来源: Ann Intern Med. 2013年158卷5 Pt 2期365-8页 2700. Cognitive impairment associated with atrial fibrillation: a meta-analysis.
作者: Shadi Kalantarian.;Theodore A Stern.;Moussa Mansour.;Jeremy N Ruskin.
来源: Ann Intern Med. 2013年158卷5 Pt 1期338-46页
Atrial fibrillation (AF) has been linked with an increased risk for cognitive impairment and dementia.
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