A qualitative exploration of escalation of care in the acute ward setting

<p><strong>Background:&nbsp;</strong>&ldquo;Failure to Rescue&rdquo; includes failing to prevent avoidable patient deterioration and death. Despite its use, delays in care escalation still affect patient outcomes.</p> <p><strong>Aims and Objective:&...

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Main Authors: Ede, J, Jeffs, E, Vollam, S, Watkinson, P
Format: Journal article
Izdano: Wiley 2019
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author Ede, J
Jeffs, E
Vollam, S
Watkinson, P
author_facet Ede, J
Jeffs, E
Vollam, S
Watkinson, P
author_sort Ede, J
collection OXFORD
description <p><strong>Background:&nbsp;</strong>&ldquo;Failure to Rescue&rdquo; includes failing to prevent avoidable patient deterioration and death. Despite its use, delays in care escalation still affect patient outcomes.</p> <p><strong>Aims and Objective:&nbsp;</strong>The aim of this qualitative service evaluation was to map the barriers and facilitators to the escalation of care in the acute ward setting and identify those that are modifiable.</p> <p><strong>Design:&nbsp;</strong>A total of 55&thinsp;hours of qualitative observations were completed to capture care escalation events. These were conducted at two hospital sites in one National Health Service trust.</p> <p><strong>Methods:&nbsp;</strong>Observations were iterative, with research team meetings being used to discuss the data and future methods. Field notes were analysed thematically by two researchers, extracting data on barriers and facilitators to escalation of care.</p> <p><strong>Results:&nbsp;</strong>Clinical nursing staff challenged the sensitivity and specificity of Early Warning Scores, describing tool failings in certain clinical scenarios. Staff did not escalate based on the alerting Early Warning Scores alone but used other clinical factors, such as bleeding, which are not necessarily captured in the scoring systems. Staff frequently did not re-escalate low-level scores. Patient and non-patient factors identified as posing barriers to escalation were complex care needs, patient outlier status, and involvement of multiple care teams. Factors negatively affecting the chain of communication during escalation were team tension, staffing levels, and inadequate handover.</p> <p><strong>Conclusion:&nbsp;</strong>This service evaluation identified barriers and facilitators to the escalation of care in the acute ward setting. Unlike other studies, we found that re-escalation or tracking of deterioration was problematic. Patients identified as being at a higher risk of escalation failure included complex patients, outliers, and patients with multiple care teams.</p> <p><strong>Relevance to clinical practice:&nbsp;</strong>This service evaluation demonstrates continuing health care communication barriers. Patient groups (complex patients and outliers) risk process failures during escalation. This can be applied in clinical practice by staff anticipating problems in these patients, documenting clear escalation pathways.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:79464089-cf52-4e62-b692-3855bde647c62023-09-13T08:18:11ZA qualitative exploration of escalation of care in the acute ward settingJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:79464089-cf52-4e62-b692-3855bde647c6Symplectic Elements at OxfordWiley2019Ede, JJeffs, EVollam, SWatkinson, P<p><strong>Background:&nbsp;</strong>&ldquo;Failure to Rescue&rdquo; includes failing to prevent avoidable patient deterioration and death. Despite its use, delays in care escalation still affect patient outcomes.</p> <p><strong>Aims and Objective:&nbsp;</strong>The aim of this qualitative service evaluation was to map the barriers and facilitators to the escalation of care in the acute ward setting and identify those that are modifiable.</p> <p><strong>Design:&nbsp;</strong>A total of 55&thinsp;hours of qualitative observations were completed to capture care escalation events. These were conducted at two hospital sites in one National Health Service trust.</p> <p><strong>Methods:&nbsp;</strong>Observations were iterative, with research team meetings being used to discuss the data and future methods. Field notes were analysed thematically by two researchers, extracting data on barriers and facilitators to escalation of care.</p> <p><strong>Results:&nbsp;</strong>Clinical nursing staff challenged the sensitivity and specificity of Early Warning Scores, describing tool failings in certain clinical scenarios. Staff did not escalate based on the alerting Early Warning Scores alone but used other clinical factors, such as bleeding, which are not necessarily captured in the scoring systems. Staff frequently did not re-escalate low-level scores. Patient and non-patient factors identified as posing barriers to escalation were complex care needs, patient outlier status, and involvement of multiple care teams. Factors negatively affecting the chain of communication during escalation were team tension, staffing levels, and inadequate handover.</p> <p><strong>Conclusion:&nbsp;</strong>This service evaluation identified barriers and facilitators to the escalation of care in the acute ward setting. Unlike other studies, we found that re-escalation or tracking of deterioration was problematic. Patients identified as being at a higher risk of escalation failure included complex patients, outliers, and patients with multiple care teams.</p> <p><strong>Relevance to clinical practice:&nbsp;</strong>This service evaluation demonstrates continuing health care communication barriers. Patient groups (complex patients and outliers) risk process failures during escalation. This can be applied in clinical practice by staff anticipating problems in these patients, documenting clear escalation pathways.</p>
spellingShingle Ede, J
Jeffs, E
Vollam, S
Watkinson, P
A qualitative exploration of escalation of care in the acute ward setting
title A qualitative exploration of escalation of care in the acute ward setting
title_full A qualitative exploration of escalation of care in the acute ward setting
title_fullStr A qualitative exploration of escalation of care in the acute ward setting
title_full_unstemmed A qualitative exploration of escalation of care in the acute ward setting
title_short A qualitative exploration of escalation of care in the acute ward setting
title_sort qualitative exploration of escalation of care in the acute ward setting
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