Improving the Timing of Laboratory Studies in Hospitalized Children: A Quality Improvement Study
- PMID: 34158310
- DOI: 10.1542/hpeds.2020-005793
Improving the Timing of Laboratory Studies in Hospitalized Children: A Quality Improvement Study
Abstract
Objectives: For hospitalized children and their families, laboratory study collection at night and in the early morning interrupts sleep and increases the stress of a hospitalization. To change this practice, our quality improvement (QI) study developed a rounding checklist aimed at increasing the percentage of routine laboratory studies ordered for and collected after 7 am.
Methods: Our QI study was conducted on the pediatric hospital medicine service at a single-site urban children's hospital over 28 months. Medical records from 420 randomly selected pediatric inpatients were abstracted, and 5 plan-do-study-act cycles were implemented during the intervention. Outcome measures included the percentage of routine laboratory studies ordered for and collected after 7 am. The process measure was use of the rounding checklist. Run charts were used for analysis.
Results: The percentage of laboratory studies ordered for after 7 am increased from a baseline median of 25.8% to a postintervention median of 75.0%, exceeding our goal of 50% and revealing special cause variation. In addition, the percentage of laboratory studies collected after 7 am increased from a baseline median of 37.1% to 76.4% post intervention, with special cause variation observed.
Conclusions: By implementing a rounding checklist, our QI study successfully increased the percentage of laboratory studies ordered for and collected after 7 am and could serve as a model for other health care systems to impact provider ordering practices and behavior. In future initiatives, investigators should evaluate the effects of similar interventions on caregiver and provider perceptions of patient- and family-centeredness, satisfaction, and the quality of patient care.
Copyright © 2021 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.
Conflict of interest statement
POTENTIAL CONFLICT OF INTEREST: The authors have indicated they have no potential conflicts of interest to disclose.
Comment in
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Improving Hospitalized Patient Sleep: It Is Easier Than It Seems.Hosp Pediatr. 2021 Jul;11(7):e115-e116. doi: 10.1542/hpeds.2021-005988. Epub 2021 Jun 22. Hosp Pediatr. 2021. PMID: 34158309 No abstract available.
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