Introduction of an emergency medicine pharmacist‐led sepsis alert response system in the emergency department: A cohort study

Author:

Roman Cristina Petronela123ORCID,Dooley Michael13,Nevill Alexandra2,Szmidel Matthew4,McGloughlin Steven56,Luckhoff Carl2,Mitra Biswadev26ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Pharmacy Department, Alfred Health Melbourne Victoria Australia

2. Emergency and Trauma Centre, Alfred Health Melbourne Victoria Australia

3. Faculty of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences Monash University Melbourne Victoria Australia

4. Central Clinical School Monash University Melbourne Victoria Australia

5. Intensive Care Unit Alfred Health Melbourne Victoria Australia

6. School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine Monash University Melbourne Victoria Australia

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveTo determine effects of implementing a sepsis alert response system in the ED that included early intervention by emergency medicine (EM) pharmacists.MethodsA prospective cohort (8 February 2016 to 28 February 2018) of patients after implementation of a sepsis alert response system in an Australian ED was compared to a retrospective cohort (3 January 2015 to 7 February 2016) of patients with sepsis who presented during EM pharmacist working hours and were admitted to the ICU.ResultsThere were 184 patients, including 80 patients pre‐ and 104 patients post‐implementation. The post‐intervention cohort was triaged at a higher acuity, had higher quick Sepsis‐related Organ Failure Assessment (qSOFA) scores and higher initial lactate measurements. After the intervention, antimicrobial agents were administered to patients within 60 min of presentation more often (21 [26.3%] to 85 [81.7%], P < 0.001). After adjusting for presenting triage category, admission lactate and presenting qSOFA scores, this association remained significant (adjusted odds ratio 9.99; 95% confidence interval 4.7–21.3). Significant improvements were observed for proportion of patients who had intravenous fluids initiated within 60 min (47.5% vs 72.1%); proportion of patients who had serum lactate measured within 60 min (50.0% vs 77.9%) and proportion of patients who had blood cultures performed within 60 min (52.5% vs 85.6%).ConclusionImplementation of a sepsis alert response that included early involvement of the EM pharmacist was associated with improvement in time to antimicrobials and other components of the sepsis bundle. An upfront, multidisciplinary approach to patients presenting to the ED with suspected sepsis should be considered more broadly.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Emergency Medicine

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