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. 2022 Nov 18;4(11):e0802.
doi: 10.1097/CCE.0000000000000802. eCollection 2022 Nov.

The Spillover Effects of Quality Improvement Beyond Target Populations in Mechanical Ventilation

Affiliations

The Spillover Effects of Quality Improvement Beyond Target Populations in Mechanical Ventilation

Andrew S Greenwald et al. Crit Care Explor. .

Abstract

To assess the impact of a mechanical ventilation quality improvement program on patients who were excluded from the intervention.

Design: Before-during-and-after implementation interrupted time series analysis to assess the effect of the intervention between coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) surgery patients (included) and left-sided valve surgery patients (excluded).

Setting: Academic medical center.

Patients: Patients undergoing CABG and left-sided valve procedures were analyzed.

Interventions: A postoperative mechanical ventilation quality improvement program was developed for patients undergoing CABG.

Measurements and main results: Patients undergoing CABG had a median mechanical ventilation time of 11 hours during P0 ("before" phase) and 6.22 hours during P2 ("after" phase; p < 0.001). A spillover effect was observed because mechanical ventilation times also decreased from 10 hours during P0 to 6 hours during P2 among valve patients who were excluded from the protocol (p < 0.001). The interrupted time series analysis demonstrated a significant level of change for ventilation time from P0 to P2 for both CABG (p < 0.0001) and valve patients (p < 0.0001). There was no significant difference in the slope of change between the CABG and valve patient populations across time cohorts (P0 vs P1 [p = 0.8809]; P1 vs P2 [p = 0.3834]; P0 vs P2 [p = 0.7672]), which suggests that the rate of change in mechanical ventilation times was similar between included and excluded patients.

Conclusions: Decreased mechanical ventilation times for patients who were not included in a protocol suggests a spillover effect of quality improvement and demonstrates that quality improvement can have benefits beyond a target population.

Keywords: cardiovascular; extubation; mechanical ventilation; quality and patient safety; ventilation.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors have disclosed that they do not have any potential conflicts of interest.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Trends in monthly median time of ventilation with trendlines per period. There were three phases to the quality improvement initiative: phase 0 (P0), pre-intervention or “before” phase; phase 1 (P1), creation of the protocol with audit and feedback (“during” phase); and phase 2 (P2), post-intervention period of implementation with audit and feedback (“after” phase). CAB = Coronary Artery Bypass.

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