Safely Reducing Hospitalizations for Anaphylaxis in Children Through an Evidence-Based Guideline

Author:

Gaffney Lukas K.12,Porter John3,Gerling Megan3,Schneider Lynda C.4,Stack Anne M.3,Shah Dhara5,Michelson Kenneth A.3

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Pediatrics

2. Department of Pediatrics, Boston Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts

3. Divisions of Emergency Medicine

4. Immunology

5. Pharmacy, Boston Children’s Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts

Abstract

BACKGROUND Emergency department visits for anaphylaxis have increased considerably over the past few decades, especially among children. Despite this, anaphylaxis management remains highly variable and contributes to significant health care spending. On the basis of emerging evidence, in this quality improvement project we aimed to safely decrease hospitalization rates, increase the use of cetirizine, and decrease use of corticosteroids for children with anaphylaxis by December 31, 2019. METHODS A multipronged intervention strategy including a revised evidence-based guideline was implemented at a tertiary children’s teaching hospital by using the Model for Improvement. Statistical process control was used to evaluate for changes in key measures. Length of stay and unplanned return visits within 72 hours were monitored as process and balancing measures, respectively. As a national comparison, hospitalization rates were compared with other hospitals’ data from the Pediatric Health Information System. RESULTS Hospitalizations decreased significantly from 28.5% to 11.2% from preimplementation to implementation, and the balancing measure of 72-hour revisits was stable. The proportion of patients receiving cetirizine increased significantly from 4.2% to 59.7% and use of corticosteroids decreased significantly from 72.6% to 32.4% in patients without asthma. The proportion of patients meeting length of stay criteria increased from 53.3% to 59.9%. Hospitalization rates decreased nationally over time. CONCLUSIONS We reduced hospitalizations for anaphylaxis by 17.3% without concomitant increases in revisits, demonstrating that unnecessary hospitalizations can be safely avoided. The use of a local evidence-based guideline paired with close outcome monitoring and sustained messaging and feedback to clinicians can effectively improve anaphylaxis management.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

Reference37 articles.

1. Fatal and near-fatal anaphylactic reactions to food in children and adolescents;Sampson;N Engl J Med,1992

2. Increase in anaphylaxis-related hospitalizations but no increase in fatalities: an analysis of United Kingdom national anaphylaxis data, 1992-2012;Turner;J Allergy Clin Immunol,2015

3. Canadian Institute for Health Information . Anaphylaxis and allergy in the emergency department. 2015. www.cihi.ca. Accessed November 4, 2019

4. Variation and trends in anaphylaxis care in United States children’s hospitals;Michelson;Acad Emerg Med,2016

5. Increasing emergency department visits for anaphylaxis, 2005-2014;Motosue;J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract,2017

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3. Trends and Variation in Pediatric Anaphylaxis Care From 2016 to 2022;The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice;2023-04

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