Development and Evaluation of a Patient Safety Model
NCT03457272 · Status: COMPLETED · Phase: NA · Type: INTERVENTIONAL · Enrollment: 34556
Last updated 2019-10-14
Summary
Despite systems for early detection of critical illness, 12% of patients in the emergency department develop clinical deterioration with an increased risk of death as a result.
There is a need for a intervention to support the identification and clinical management of patients at risk of clinical deterioration earlier hospitalization. The Cincinnati Children's Hospital has introduced a model that systematically complements systems for early detection of critical illness with the assessment of patient and relatives concern, clinical intuition and concern of the staff. In addition, the model includes formalized organizational processes aimed at systematic review of risk patients and early treatment efforts. Studies from United States indicate that the model can lead to reduction of serious incidental events and increase the staff awareness of the situation. The Cincinnati model is designed for children and has not yet been studied in a controlled study.
Purpose To develop and investigate the impact of a Danish patient safety model. Method A literature review is conducted to identify risk factors that should be included in a model aimed at detecting and managing clinical deterioration. A patient safety model is developed on the basis of the literature review and the Cincinnati model and is tested in a pilot study. In a controlled intervention study, the effect is investigated against severe clinical deterioration. The intervention is carried out at the emergency departments at Horsens Regional Hospital and Viborg Regional Hospital with the regional hospitals in Randers and Herning as control departments.
Conditions
- Emergency Medicine
Interventions
- OTHER
-
New risk assessment
Consists of a simple physiological scoring system and an assessment of patients who should assist healthcare professionals in identifying patients at risk of clinical deterioration earlier and support timely response and escalation of observation, care and treatment and thereby prevent the development of severe clinical deterioration. The patients included in the study will be monitored using the new risk assessment tool with different intervals according to the patients' conditions. Underlying the tool are algorithms of action for intervention in the critically ill patient, inter professional guidelines and guidance for standardized monitoring, escalation plans and huddles.
Sponsors & Collaborators
-
Horsens Hospital
collaborator OTHER -
Central Jutland Regional Hospital
collaborator OTHER -
Randers Regional Hospital
collaborator OTHER -
Herning Hospital
collaborator OTHER -
Aarhus University Hospital
collaborator OTHER -
University of Aarhus
lead OTHER
Principal Investigators
-
Gitte B Tygesen, PhD student · Regionshospitalet Horsens
Study Design
- Allocation
- NON_RANDOMIZED
- Purpose
- PREVENTION
- Masking
- NONE
- Model
- PARALLEL
Eligibility
- Min Age
- 18 Years
- Sex
- ALL
- Healthy Volunteers
- No
Timeline & Regulatory
- Start
- 2017-10-30
- Primary Completion
- 2018-05-31
- Completion
- 2018-05-31
Countries
- Denmark
Study Locations
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