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LO35: A province-wide quality improvement collaborative for treatment of children's pain in Alberta's emergency departments

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 May 2020

J. Thull-Freedman
Affiliation:
Alberta Children's Hospital/University of Calgary, Calgary, AB
E. Pols
Affiliation:
Alberta Children's Hospital/University of Calgary, Calgary, AB
A. McFetridge
Affiliation:
Alberta Children's Hospital/University of Calgary, Calgary, AB
S. Libbey
Affiliation:
Alberta Children's Hospital/University of Calgary, Calgary, AB
K. Lonergan
Affiliation:
Alberta Children's Hospital/University of Calgary, Calgary, AB
B. Lethebe
Affiliation:
Alberta Children's Hospital/University of Calgary, Calgary, AB
S. Ali
Affiliation:
Alberta Children's Hospital/University of Calgary, Calgary, AB
A. Stang
Affiliation:
Alberta Children's Hospital/University of Calgary, Calgary, AB

Abstract

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Background: Pediatric pain is often under-treated in emergency departments (EDs), causing short and long-term harm. In Alberta EDs, children's pain outcomes were unknown. A recent quality improvement collaborative (QIC) led by our team improved children's pain care in 4 urban EDs. We then spread to all EDs in Alberta using the Institute for Healthcare Improvement Framework for Going to Full Scale. Aim Statement: To increase the proportion of children <12 years who receive topical anesthetic before needle procedures from 11% to 50%; and for children <17 years with fractures: to 1) increase the proportion receiving analgesia from 31% to 50%; 2) increase the proportion with pain score documentation from 24% to 50%, and 3) reduce time to analgesia from 60 to 30 minutes, within 1 year. Measures & Design: All 97 EDs in Alberta that treat children were invited. Each was asked to form a project team, attend webinars, develop key driver diagrams and perform PDSA tests of change. Sites were given a monthly list of randomly selected charts for audit and entered data in REDCap for upload to a provincial run chart dashboard. Baseline performance measurement informed aims. Measures included proportion of children <12 years undergoing a lab test who received topical anesthetic, and for children <17 years with fracture, the proportion with a pain score, proportion receiving analgesia and median minutes to analgesia. Length of stay and use of opioids were balancing measures. Control charts were used to detect special cause. Interrupted time series (ITS) was performed to assess significance and trends. Evaluation/Results: 36 sites (37%) participated, including rural and urban sites from all regions. 8417 visits were audited. 23/36 sites completed audits before and after tests of change and were analyzed. Special cause occurred for all aims. The proportion receiving topical anesthetic increased from 11% to 30% (ITS p < 0. 001). For children with fractures, the proportion with pain scores increased from 24% to 34% (ITS p = 0.21, underlying trend present), proportion receiving analgesic medication increased from 31% to 39% (ITS p = 0.41, underlying trend present) and minutes to analgesia decreased from 60 to 28 (ITS p < 0. 01). There was no increase in length of stay or use of opioid medications. Discussion/Impact: A pragmatic approach encouraging locally led change was well-received and key to success. The QIC method shows promise for improving outcomes in diverse EDs across large geographic areas. Next steps include further spread and sustainability measurement.

Type
Oral Presentations
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians 2020