Keywords

One-hour bundle, power hour, quality improvement, screening, sepsis, timely

 

Authors

  1. Bray, Carla DNP, APRN (FNU Graduate)

ABSTRACT

Background: Sepsis is deadly when not recognized and treated in a timely manner and leads to 270,000 deaths each year in America. Mortality increases eight percent for each hour treatment is delayed. Sepsis-related admission is the most expensive condition in the United States with a median cost per patient of $32,421.

 

Local problem: Baseline data for patients with sepsis revealed that only 30% were recognized in triage, only 20% received correct amounts of fluids, and only 45% received antibiotics within one hour. The aim of this project was to improve timely sepsis care to 75% for patients in a rural emergency department within 90 days.

 

Methods: A rapid cycle quality improvement project was completed, consisting of four plan-do-study-act cycles over 90 days. Each cycle included tests of change related to team and patient engagement, screening, and the use of timely sepsis orders. Data were collected three times weekly and analyzed using run charts.

 

Interventions: Interventions included screening in triage with positively screened patients receiving participatory education, team handoff communication, a sepsis checklist for nurse-driven orders, and Power Hour for timely care.

 

Results: Team communication improved to 83%. Patient education exceeded goal, with 100% of patients taking an active role in care. Sepsis screening improved to 100%. The recommended One-Hour Bundle for timely sepsis treatment improved to 83%.

 

Conclusion: The project was successful in improving patient and team engagement, screening, and sepsis care within 1 hour for emergency department patients.