Effectiveness of interprofessional tracheostomy teams: A systematic review

Author:

Ninan Ashly1,Grubb Lisa M.2ORCID,Brenner Michael J.34,Pandian Vinciya5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Johns Hopkins University Baltimore Maryland USA

2. Department of Nursing Faculty Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing Baltimore Maryland USA

3. Department of Otolaryngology—Head & Neck Surgery University of Michigan Ann Arbor Michigan USA

4. Global Tracheostomy Collaborative Raleigh North Carolina USA

5. Department of Nursing Faculty, and Outcomes After Critical Illness and Surgery (OACIS) Research Group Johns Hopkins University Baltimore Maryland USA

Abstract

AbstractAim(s)To systematically locate, evaluate and synthesize evidence regarding effectiveness of interprofessional tracheostomy teams in increasing speaking valve use and decreasing time to speech and decannulation, adverse events, lengths of stay (intensive care unit (ICU) and hospital) and mortality. In addition, to evaluate facilitators and barriers to implementing an interprofessional tracheostomy team in hospital settings.DesignSystematic review using Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta‐Analyses (PRISMA) and Johns Hopkins Nursing Evidence‐Based Practice Model's guidance.MethodsOur clinical question: Do interprofessional tracheostomy teams increase speaking valve use and decrease time to speech and decannulation, adverse events, lengths of stay and mortality? Primary studies involving adult patients with a tracheostomy were included. Eligible studies were systematically reviewed by two reviewers and verified by another two reviewers.Data SourcesMEDLINE, CINAHL and EMBASE.ResultsFourteen studies met eligibility criteria; primarily pre‐post intervention cohort studies. Percent increase in speaking valve use ranged 14%–275%; percent reduction in median days to speech ranged 33%–73% and median days to decannulation ranged 26%–32%; percent reduction in rate of adverse events ranged 32%–88%; percent reduction in median hospital length of stay days ranged 18–40 days; no significant change in overall ICU length of stay and mortality rates. Facilitators include team education, coverage, rounds, standardization, communication, lead personnel and automation, patient tracking; barrier is financial.ConclusionPatients with tracheostomy who received care from a dedicated interprofessional team showed improvements in several clinical outcomes.Implications for Patient CareAdditional high‐quality evidence from rigorous, well‐controlled and adequately powered studies are necessary, as are implementation strategies to promote broader adoption of interprofessional tracheostomy team strategies. Interprofessional tracheostomy teams are associated with improved safety and quality of care.ImpactEvidence from review provides rationale for broader implementation of interprofessional tracheostomy teams.Reporting MethodPRISMA and Synthesis Without Meta‐analysis (SWiM).Patient/Public ContributionNone.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine,General Nursing

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