A 10-Year Analysis of 3693 Craniotomies During a Transition to Multidisciplinary Teams, Protocols, and Pathways.

Autor: Akins, Paul T., Banerjee, Amit, Guppy, Kern, Silverthorn, James, Fitzgibbon, John, Nandan, Yogesh, Yu, Elaine O., Pacheco, Luis, Rozance, Jack, Azevedo, Rob, Chang, James, Hawk, Mark W.
Předmět:
Zdroj: Permanente Journal; Fall2019, Vol. 23 Issue 4, p4-10, 7p
Abstrakt: Introduction: A Cochrane review of teams, protocols, and pathways demonstrated improved care efficiency and outcomes over a traditional model. Little is known about this approach for craniotomy. Methods: This observational study involved sequential implementation of a multidisciplinary team, protocols, and a craniotomy pathway. Data on 3693 admissions were retrospectively reviewed at a tertiary care neurosurgery center from 2008 to 2017 for the top 6 diagnosis-related group codes. In June 2016, a searchable discharge summary template in the electronic medical record was implemented to capture data regarding quality, efficiency, and outcomes. Results: Staffing transitioned to a team of neurosurgeons, neurointensivists, neurohospitalists, and midlevel practitioners. Order sets, protocols, and pathways were developed. Quality improvements were observed for craniotomy and cranioplasty surgical site infections, ventriculitis, coagulopathy reversal, and decompressive hemicraniectomy rates for stroke. Case volume increased 73%, yet craniotomy hospital days decreased from 2768 in 2008 to 2599 in 2017 because of reduced length of stay. We accommodated service line growth without hospital expansion or case backlogs. With an average California hospital day rate of $3341, the improved length of stay decreased costs by $14,666,990/y. We also present outcomes data, including craniotomy indications, operative timing, complications, functional outcomes, delays in discharge, and discharge destinations using the craniotomy discharge summary. Conclusion: Multidisciplinary teams, protocols, and pathways reduced craniotomy complication rates, improved hospital length of stay by 63%, reduced costs, and increased professional collegiality and satisfaction. A searchable craniotomy discharge summary is an important tool for continuous monitoring of quality and efficiency of care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index