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An Interventional Quality Improvement Study to Assess the Compliance to Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation Documentation in an Indian Teaching Hospital.

Authors :
Nevrekar, Viraj
Panda, Prasan Kumar
Wig, Naveet
Pandey, R. M.
Agarwal, Praveen
Biswas, Ashutosh
Source :
Indian Journal of Critical Care Medicine; Nov2017, Vol. 21 Issue 11, p758-764, 7p, 1 Diagram, 6 Charts
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Background: Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) should be performed as per the international guidelines; however, compliance to these guidelines is difficult to assess. This study was conducted to determine the compliance to American Heart Association (2010) guideline on CPR documentation by among resident physicians before and after resident training (two arms). Methods: This pre-postinterventional quality improvement study was conducted in a referral center, North India. Data of hospitalized in-hospital CPR patients were collected in the form of quality indicators (checklists) as defined by the guideline and compared between two arms of before--after resident training. Residents were given appropriate training in CPR technique as per the guideline. The compliance of CPR documentation was assessed pre- and post-intervention. Results: The baseline arm compliance of various components of CPR documentation was low. The postintervention arm compliances of all components significantly increased (baseline, 2.5% to postintervention, 15.11%, P = 0.03). Individual components assessed were documentation of assessment of responsiveness (65% to 77.9%, P = 0.19), assessment of breathing (37.5% to 58.1%, P = 0.03), assessment of carotid pulse (62.5% to 79%, P = 0.05), rate of chest compressions (20% to 39.5%, P = 0.04), airway management (62.5% to 82.5%, P = 0.02), and compressions to breaths ratio (12.5% to 31.4%, P = 0.02). Documentation of chest compression rate compared to nondocumentation (12 of 42 vs. 11 of 84, P = 0.04) was independently associated with a higher rate of return of spontaneous circulation. The study however did not show any survival benefits. Conclusions: This study establishes that the compliance to CPR documentation is poor as assessed by CPR documentation content and quality, which improves after physician training, but not up to the mark level (100%) that may be due to busy Indian hospital settings and human behavioral factors. Due to ethical constraints of live CPR assessment, this document checklist approach may be considered as an internal quality assessment method for CPR compliance. Furthermore, correct instruction in CPR technique along with proper documentation of the procedure is required, followed up with periodic re-education during the residency period and beyond. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09725229
Volume :
21
Issue :
11
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Indian Journal of Critical Care Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
126249070
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.4103/ijccm.IJCCM_249_17