Resident-Championed Quality Improvement Provides Value: Confronting Prolonged Mechanical Ventilation.

2020 
Abstract Background The Quality In-Training Initiative (QITI) provides hands-on quality improvement education for residents. As our institution has ranked in the bottom quartile for prolonged mechanical ventilation (PMV) according to the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (NSQIP), we sought to illustrate how our resident-led QITI could be used to determine perioperative contributors to PMV. Materials and methods The Model for Improvement framework (developed by Associates in Process Improvement) was used to target postoperative ventilator management. However, baseline findings from our 2016 NSQIP data suggested that preoperative patient factors were more likely contributing to PMV. Subsequently, a retrospective one-to-one case-control study was developed, comparing preoperative NSQIP risk calculator profiles for PMV patients to case-matched patients for age, sex, procedure, and emergent case status. Chart review determined ventilator time, 30-d outcomes, and all-cause mortality. Results Forty-five patients with PMV (69% elective) had a median ventilator time of 134 h (interquartile range 87-254). The NSQIP calculator demonstrated increased preoperative risk percentages in PMV patients when compared to case-matched patients for any complication (includes PMV), predicted length of stay, and death (all P  Conclusions Resident-led QITI projects enhance resident education while exposing opportunities for improving care. Preoperative patient factors play a larger-than-anticipated role in PMV at our institution. Ongoing efforts are aimed toward preoperative identification and optimization of high-risk patients.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    23
    References
    1
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []