Sustained Quality and Service Delivery in an Expanding Point-of-Care Testing Network in Remote Australian Primary Health Care

Author:

Matthews Susan Janet1,Spaeth Brooke1,Duckworth Lauren1,Richards Janet Noreen1,Prisk Emma1,Auld Malcolm2,Quirk Tina3,Omond Rodney4,Shephard Mark D. S.1

Affiliation:

1. From Flinders University International Centre for Point-of-Care Testing, Flinders University, Adelaide, Australia (Matthews, Spaeth, Duckworth, Richards, Prisk, Shephard)

2. the Primary Health Care Branch, Central Australian Health Service, Department of Health, Northern Territory Government, Alice Springs, Australia (Auld)

3. the Safety and Quality Unit (Quirk), Primary Health Care Branch, Top End Health Service, Department of Health, Northern Territory Government, Casuarina, Australia

4. the Medical Unit (Omond), Primary Health Care Branch, Top End Health Service, Department of Health, Northern Territory Government, Casuarina, Australia

Abstract

Context.— Since 2008, the Northern Territory Point-of-Care Testing Program has improved patient access to pathology testing for acute and chronic disease management for remote health services. Objective.— To evaluate the analytical quality, service delivery, and clinical utility of an expanding remote point-of-care testing network. Design.— Four years (2016–2019) of data on analytical quality, test numbers, and training statistics and 6 months of clinical point-of-care testing data from Abbott i-STATs at remote health services throughout the Northern Territory were analyzed to assess analytical performance, program growth, and clinical utility. Results.— From 2016 to 2019, point-of-care test numbers increased, with chemistry and blood gas testing more than doubling to 8500 and 6000 tests, respectively, troponin I testing almost doubling (to 6000), and international normalized ratio testing plateauing at 8000 tests. Participation in quality control and proficiency testing was high, with quality comparable to laboratory-based analytical goals. A shift toward flexible training and communication modes was noted. An audit of point-of-care test results demonstrated elevated creatinine, associated with chronic kidney disease management, as the most common clinically actionable patient result. Conclusions.— The Northern Territory Point-of-Care Testing Program provides high quality point-of-care testing within remote primary health services for acute and chronic patient management and care. Clinical need, sound analytical performance, flexibility in training provision, and effective support services have facilitated the sustainability of this expanding point-of-care testing model in the remote Northern Territory during the past 11 years.

Publisher

Archives of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine

Subject

Medical Laboratory Technology,General Medicine,Pathology and Forensic Medicine

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