Multidisciplinary Effort to Decrease Time From Admission to Chemotherapy on an Inpatient Oncology Unit

Author:

Man Louise1,Sen Jeremy2,Giordano Jeanne2,McLoughlin Erin1,Morris Amy2,DeGregory Kathlene2,Thomas Tanya23,Daniels Elizabeth23,Huntsinger Lisa2,Keng Michael1

Affiliation:

1. University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA

2. University of Virginia Medical Center, Charlottesville, VA

3. University of Virginia School of Nursing, Charlottesville, VA

Abstract

There are no national standards for time between patient arrival and the initiation of scheduled chemotherapy (time to chemotherapy [TTC]). Delays in this process have a negative impact on patient care and the use of health care resources. At the University of Virginia Cancer Center, mean TTC in 2015 was 12.1 hours and mean length of stay (LOS) was 5.45 days at baseline. We formed a multidisciplinary team that participated in ASCO’s Quality Training Program. We aimed to improve TTC by 10% over 6 months. We used Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) cycles as quality improvement (QI) models and used XmR charts to evaluate the interventions. The first PDSA cycle involved amending the chemotherapy consent process; mean TTC and LOS improved to 9.3 hours and 4.65 days, respectively. The second PDSA cycle involved shifting pharmacist review of chemotherapy orders to before admission rather than after patient arrival. Mean TTC remained at 9.4 hours (net 22% improvement from baseline) and LOS improved to 4.33 days (net 21% improvement). Our team surpassed the 10% improvement goal for TTC. This QI project faced a few limitations. Our baseline data set was a retrospective cohort review. In addition, oncology patients have a wide range of individual clinical needs that may have an impact on TTC. Delays in TTC have an impact on oncologic care at many medical centers. Our project highlights the need for guidance on this issue. We recommend that other institutions form multidisciplinary teams and also use QI tools to assess delays and implement changes.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Health Policy,Oncology (nursing),Oncology

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