Vital Signs Directed Therapy for the Critically Ill: Improved Adherence to the Treatment Protocol Two Years after Implementation in an Intensive Care Unit in Tanzania

Author:

Hvarfner Anna123ORCID,Blixt Jonas45,Schell Carl Otto678ORCID,Castegren Markus49,Lugazia Edwin R.1011,Mulungu Moses10,Litorp Helena612ORCID,Baker Tim4613ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Medical Faculty, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden

2. Mora Hospital, Region Dalarna, Mora, Sweden

3. Center for Clinical Research Dalarna, Uppsala University, Falun, Sweden

4. Perioperative Medicine and Intensive Care, Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden

5. Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden

6. Department of Global Public Health, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden

7. Department of Internal Medicine, Nyköping Hospital, Region Sörmland, Nyköping, Sweden

8. Centre for Clinical Research Sörmland, Uppsala University, Eskilstuna, Sweden

9. CLINTEC, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden

10. Department of Anaesthesiology, Muhimbili National Hospital, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania

11. Department of Anaesthesiology, Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Science, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania

12. International Maternal and Child Health, Department of Women’s and Children’s Health, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden

13. College of Medicine, Blantyre, Malawi

Abstract

Treating deranged vital signs is a mainstay of critical care throughout the world. In an ICU in a university hospital in Tanzania, the implementation of the Vital Signs Directed Therapy Protocol in 2014 led to an increase in acute treatments for deranged vital signs. The mortality rate for hypotensive patients decreased from 92% to 69%. In this study, the aim was to investigate the sustainability of the implementation two years later. An observational, patient-record-based study was conducted in the ICU in August 2016. Data on deranged vital signs and acute treatments were extracted from the patients’ charts. Adherence to the protocol, defined as an acute treatment in the same or subsequent hour following a deranged vital sign, was calculated and compared with before and immediately after implementation. Two-hundred and eighty-nine deranged vital signs were included. Adherence was 29.8% two years after implementation, compared with 16.6% (p<0.001) immediately after implementation and 2.9% (p<0.001) before implementation. Consequently, the implementation of the Vital Signs Directed Therapy Protocol appears to have led to a sustainable increase in the treatment of deranged vital signs. The protocol may have potential to improve patient safety in other settings where critically ill patients are managed.

Funder

Life Support Foundation

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Emergency Medicine

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