Improving evidence-based care in cystic fibrosis through quality improvement

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Abstract

Objective: To increase clinician adherence to prescribing guidelines for pulmonary medications in children with cystic fibrosis (CF). Design: Quality improvement project with multiple time series design. Setting: The CF center at a tertiary care pediatric hospital in the United States. Patients: Children with CF who were eligible to receive oral azithromycin, nebulized dornase alfa, or inhaled tobramycin sulfate based on prescribing guidelines for CF lung disease. Intervention: Evidence-based prescribing guidelines were designed by a local committee to reflect consensus recommendations from the CF Foundation. Clinicians and families were educated about guidelines. Adherence to prescribing guidelines was tracked using a local CF database and record reviews. Weekly meetings were used to highlight adherence failures and promote clinician accountability. Main Outcome Measure: The rate of clinician adherence to prescribing guidelines. Results: One hundred seventy patients with CF were included. At the start of the project, the rate of clinician adherence to prescribing guidelines was 62%. After 3 months of the project, the rate of clinician adherence to prescribing guidelines was 87% (odds ratio=4.6; 95% confidence interval, 3.0-7.0). The improvements in adherence to prescribing guidelines were sustained for 21 months of follow-up. Conclusions: Educating clinicians about prescribing guidelines, sharing guidelines with families, and monitoring clinician adherence improve prescribing adherence to evidence-based recommendations. ©2010 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.

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APA

McPhail, G. L., Weiland, J., Acton, J. D., Ednick, M., Chima, A., VanDyke, R., … Seid, M. (2010). Improving evidence-based care in cystic fibrosis through quality improvement. Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, 164(10), 957–960. https://doi.org/10.1001/archpediatrics.2010.178

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