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Sustained Performance of Cardiac Arrest Prevention in Pediatric Cardiac Intensive Care Units

Dana Mueller,David K Bailly,Mousumi Banerjee, R A Bertrandt,Santiago Borasino, Mario Briceno-Medina, Titus Chan,J Wesley Diddle,Yuliya Domnina, Katherine Clarke-Myers,Chloe Connelly,Amy Florez,Michael Gaies, Janie Garza, Rod Ghassemzadeh,John Lane, Amy N McCammond,Mary K Olive,Laura Ortmann, Parthak Prodhan,Tia Tortoriello Raymond,Jun Sasaki,Carly Scahill, Luke W Schroeder,Kurt R Schumacher,David K Werho,Wenying Zhang,Jeffrey Alten, PC CAP Collaborators

JAMA network open(2024)

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摘要
Importance:The Pediatric Cardiac Critical Care Consortium (PC4) cardiac arrest prevention (CAP) quality improvement (QI) project facilitated a decreased in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA) incidence rate across multiple hospitals. The sustainability of this outcome has not been determined. Objective:To examine the IHCA incidence rate at participating hospitals after the QI project ended and discern which factors best aligned with sustained improvement. Design, Setting, and Participants:This observational cohort study compared IHCA data from the CAP era (July 1, 2018, to December 31, 2019) with data from the 2-year follow-up era (March 1, 2020, to February 28, 2022). Data were obtained from pediatric cardiac intensive care units (CICUs) from 17 PC4 CAP-participating hospitals. Intervention:The CAP practice bundle was designed to facilitate local practice integration, with the intention to implement, adapt, and continue CAP processes beyond the CAP era. A web-based survey was administered 2 years after the end of the project to estimate CAP-specific QI work. Main Outcomes and Measures:Risk-adjusted IHCA incidence rates across all admissions were compared between study eras. The survey generated a novel hospital-specific QI sustainability score, which is generally reflective of the sum of local CAP work performed. Results:There were no clinically important differences in demographic and admission characteristics between the 13 082 CAP era admissions and 16 284 follow-up admissions (total mean [SD] age, 5.1 [8.4] years; 56.1% male). Risk-adjusted IHCA incidences were not different between the CAP vs follow-up eras (2.8% vs 2.8%; odds ratio, 1.03; 95% CI, 0.89-1.19), suggesting sustained prevention improvement. There was also no difference between eras in risk-adjusted IHCA incidence within medical, surgical, or high-risk subgroups. A lower hospital QI sustainability score was correlated with higher odds for IHCA in the follow-up vs CAP era (correlation coefficient, -0.58; P = .02). Five hospitals had increases of 1% or greater in risk-adjusted IHCA rates in the follow-up era; these hospitals had significantly lower QI sustainability scores and were less likely to have adopted sustainability elements during the CAP era or report persistent engagement for CAP-related QI processes during follow-up. Conclusions and Relevance:In this cohort study of all CICU admissions across 17 hospitals, IHCA prevention was feasible and sustainable; the established reduction in risk-adjusted IHCA rate was maintained for at least 2 years after the end of the CAP project. Both implementation strategies and continued engagement in CAP processes during the follow-up era were associated with sustained improvement.
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