Safe-SCOPE Pilot Study
- Conditions
- Quality Assurance of Patient Safety
- Interventions
- Other: Checklist VICUROther: Checklist ISBAR3
- Registration Number
- NCT03117088
- Lead Sponsor
- RWTH Aachen University
- Brief Summary
Study Title Safe- SCOPE Pilot Study Standardized Checklist of Patient Information Exchange
Short Title Safe- SCOPE Pilot Study
Study Design: Single centre two armed cluster randomised crossover pilot study
Study duration: 5 months
Objectives:
* Influence of standardised checklists on medical/ physician handovers on an Intensive Care Unit -ICU and its influence on patient safety
* Satisfaction survey in physicians group
Number of patients:
All patients treated on OIM during assessment period
Checklist Intervention
* All physicians working in the department of Intensive Care Medicine and Intermediate Care are informed and enlightened about Safe-SCOPE Pilot Study. After written consent participating physicians will use an online form ISBAR3 Checklist or alternative Checklist for handovers twice a day.
* Handover times/schedule:
OIM 1,2,3,5, und 6: 7:30 am and 7:30 pm OIM 4 und WEA 1: 7:30 am and 2:00 pm
* ISBAR3 Checklist
* VICUR Checklist wash- out Phase:
* No checklists for one month
Efficacy:
Patients:
* Mortality rate
* Duration on ICU
* Reuptake on ICU
* SOFA Score on admission to ICU, 48h, 72h and 120h after admission
* Handover duration per patient
* Number of enclosed patients
Handover:
* Entire handover duration
* Interruptions during handover
- Detailed Description
The simplest definition of patient safety is the prevention of errors and adverse events to patient associated with health care. While health care has become more effective it has also become more complex, with greater use of new technologies, medicines and treatments. Health services treat older and sicker patients who often present with significant co- morbidities requiring more and more difficult decisions as to health care priorities.
European data, mostly from European Union Member States, consistently show that medical errors and health care related adverse events occur in 8-12% of hospitalization. For example, the United Kingdom Department of health, in its 2000 report "An organisation with a memory", estimated about 850 000 adverse events a year (10% of hospital admissions). Spain (in its 2005 national study of adverse events) and France and Denmark have published incidence studies with similar results.
While 23% of European Union citizens claim to have been directly affected by medial errors, 18% claim to have experienced a serious medical error in a hospital and 11% to be prescribed wrong medication. Evidence on medial errors shows that 50% to 70,2% of such harm can be prevented through comprehensive systematic approaches to patient safety.
Statistics of the World Health Organisation (WHO) show further more that strategies to reduce the rate of adverse events in the European Union alone would lead to the prevention of more than 750 000 harm-inflicted medial errors per year, leading in turn to over 3,2 million fewer days of hospitalization, 260 000 fewer incidents of permanent disability, and 95 000 fewer deaths per years. Our working group clarifies this as very impressive data and statistics.
In aviation checklists are an established instrument to avoid adverse events and so to improve safety. Like in the cockpit also in operating room checklists and briefings can be useful to reduce perceived risks and improve collaboration among operating rooms personnel by controlling safety standards, availability of required sources and responsibility assignment. The World Health Organisation WHO in 2009 established checklist (Save Surgery Saves Lives) is a feasible task increasingly used with individual adaptation. The Implementation has to be ingrained in a hospital wide safety culture with patient safety- related behaviour and perceived personal empowerment. The safe surgery saves lives campaign showed in eight hospitals worldwide with different socio- ecological backgrounds that in around 8. 000 operations mortality and infections rate decreased significantly after using the safe surgery saves lives checklist in operating theatres.
Checklists are efficient working tools used as a reminder or to structure processes. They guarantee that processes are objective and reproducible and therefore increase patient- safety. Especially in stress and emergency situations as they exist on an Intensive Care Unit checklists can help to avoid mind mistakes and demonstrate possible decisions.
Related to these data and statistics and on that important background we are planning a multi-centre main trial on improving patient safety: Standardized Checklist of Patient Information Exchange. Because there is no information about the magnitude of checklist effects on patient data and there is no risk for the patients we use the Safe SCOPE Pilot study to estimate the effects size of the checklists and to investigate the feasibility of the main trial.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 7
Physicians:
- all physicians working on ICU (department of Intensive Medicine and Intermediate Care) during data collection
- existing written consent
Patients:
- All patients treated in the department of Intensive Care Medicine and Intermediate Care (OIM) during assessment period who passed at least two online form based handovers
Physicians:
- missing written consent
- Chief of the department of Intensive Care medicine and Intermediate Care
- Colleagues involved in Safe- SCOPE Pilot Study protocol or group of experts
Patients:
- Age < 18 years
- Pregnancy
- ward shift within OIM and hereby associated cluster change
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- CROSSOVER
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Checklist VICUR Checklist VICUR comparator Checklist Checklist ISBAR 3 Checklist ISBAR3 online-based checklist for standardized handovers
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Change of SOFA Score at hour 48 admission and hour 48 Change of SOFA Score to baseline (admission) and 48 hours after admission
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Change of SOFA Score at hour 72 baseline and hour 72 Change of SOFA Score to baseline (admission) and after 72 hours
Duration on ICU 30 days Duration on ICU measured in days
Handover duration entire up to 3 months entire handover duration
Mortality rate 30 days Mortality rate
Reuptake on ICU 30 days Reuptake on ICU and transferring ward
Handover duration patient up to 3 months Handover duration per single patient
Interruptions up to 3 months Interruptions during handover categories: none, \< 5min, \> 5min
physicians satisfaction through study completion, an average of 5 months evaluation of satisfaction by questionnaire
Change of SOFA Score at hour 120 baseline and hour 120 Change of SOFA Score to baseline (admission) and after 120 hours
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
RWTH Aachen University
🇩🇪Aachen, NRW, Germany