Preprocedure care for outpatients in the cardiac catheterization lab in an acute care hospital in central Mississippi: a best practice implementation project.
Journal
JBI evidence implementation
ISSN: 2691-3321
Titre abrégé: JBI Evid Implement
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101772772
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
01 Jun 2023
01 Jun 2023
Historique:
medline:
5
6
2023
pubmed:
18
11
2022
entrez:
17
11
2022
Statut:
epublish
Résumé
The objective of this implementation project was to improve the cardiac catheterization lab multidisciplinary team's compliance with best practices regarding preprocedural care. The cardiac catheterization lab performs numerous diagnostic and interventional outpatient procedures. Preprocedural care is a crucial step in preparing patients and clinical staff. The JBI Evidence Implementation framework was used for this project. The baseline audit for the project included a review of 30 electronic health records for best practice adherence. The Getting Research into Practice tool guided leadership to increase awareness and compliance to evidence-based practice. A follow-up audit of 30 electronic health records followed implementation of strategies. Baseline audit data suggested all best practices combined were only followed at 79%, and revealed the need for improvement in preprocedural phone calls to patients and documentation related to patient education regarding the procedure and expectations for procedure recovery. Four barriers were identified and multiple strategies were implemented in an attempt to improve compliance with evidence-based practices. Follow-up audits showed an overall improvement to 81% after project implementation. The project showed improvements with best practices for preprocedural care in the outpatient setting. However, more work remains to obtain sustainability of best practices, including preprocedural assessment undertaken prior to the cardiac catheterization procedure, information provided to the patient prior to the cardiac catheterization procedure explaining the test and expected recovery, and patients receiving a phone call prior to the procedure for reminders of procedural details.
Identifiants
pubmed: 36385102
doi: 10.1097/XEB.0000000000000358
pii: 02205615-202306000-00008
doi:
Types de publication
Review
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM
Pagination
167-177Informations de copyright
Copyright © 2022 JBI. Unauthorized reproduction of this article is prohibited.
Références
American College of Cardiology. Exams and tests. Cardiosmart.org. Available at: https://www.cardiosmart.org/topics/coronary-artery-disease/exams-and-tests [cited 4 September 2021].
Bashore TM, Balter S, Barac A, Byrne JG, Cavendish JJ, Chambers CE, et al. 2012 American College of Cardiology Foundation/Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions Expert Consensus Document on Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory Standards Update. J Am Coll Cardiol 2012; 59:2221–2305.
Naidu SS, Abbott JD, Bagai J, Blankenship J, Garcia S, Iqbal SN, et al. SCAI expert consensus update on best practices in the cardiac catheterization laboratory. Catheter Cardiovasc Interv 2021; 98:255–276.
Monteleone PP, Yeh RW. Management of complications. Intervent Cardiol Clin 2016; 5:201–209.
Pearson A, Richardson M, Peels S, Cairns M. The preadmission care of patients undergoing day surgery: a systematic review. Healthcare Reports 2004; 2:1–20.
Zack CJ, Senecal C, Kinar Y, Metzger Y, Bar-Sinai Y, Widmer RJ, et al. Leveraging machine learning techniques to forecast patient prognosis after percutaneous coronary intervention. JACC Cardiovasc Interv 2019; 12:1304–1311.
Jordan Z, Lockwood C, Munn Z, Aromatari E. The updated Joanna Briggs Institute model of evidence-based healthcare. Int J Evid Based Healthc 2019; 17:58–71.
Porritt K. Evidence summary. Cardiac catheterization procedures: preprocedural care. The JBI EBP Database, JBI@Ovid 2021; JBI-ES-3316-4.
Rolley JX, Salamonson Y, Wensley C, Dennison CR, Davidson PM. Nursing clinical practice guidelines to improve care for people undergoing percutaneous coronary interventions. Aust Crit Care 2011; 24:18–38.
Boyer PJ, Yell JA, Andrews JG, Seckeler MD. Anxiety reduction after preprocedure meetings in patients with CHD. Cardiol Young 2020; 30:991–994.
Nanna MG, Peterson ED, Wu A, Harding T, Galanos AN, Wruck L, et al. Age, knowledge, preferences, and risk tolerance for invasive cardiac care. Am Heart J 2020; 219:99–108.
Stables RH, Booth J, Welstand J, Wright A, Ormerod OJ, Hodgson WR. A randomised controlled trial to compare a nurse practitioner to medical staff in the preparation of patients for diagnostic cardiac catheterisation: the study of nursing intervention in practice (SNIP). Eur J Cardiovasc Nurs 2004; 3:53–59.
Hawranek M, Gasior PM, Buchta P, Gierlotka M, Czapla K, Tajstra M. Periprocedural checklist in the catheterisation laboratory is associated with decreased rate of treatment complications. Kardiol Pol 2015; 73:511–519.
Nicholson P, Kuhn L, Manias E, Sloman M. The design and evaluation of a pre-procedure checklist specific to the cardiac catheterisation laboratory. Aust Crit Care 2021; 34:350–357.
Porritt K, McArthur A, Lockwood C, Munn Z, editors. JBI handbook for evidence implementation. JBI, 2020. Available at: https://implementationmanual.jbi.global . https://doi.org/10.46658/JBIMEI-20-01 .
University of Mississippi Medical Center. Human research office: templates, forms, and samples. N.d. Available at: https://www.umc.edu/Research/Research-Offices/Human-Research-Office/Templates-Forms-and-Samples1.html [cited 11 November 2021].
Services CfMaM. Re-opening facilities to provide nonemergent nonCOVID-19 healthcare. 2020. Available at: https://www.cms.gov/files/document/covid-recommendations-reopening-facilities-provide-nonemergent-care.pdf [updated 8 June 2020; cited 2 December 2021].