A Multifaceted Approach to Improving Postischemic Stroke Dysphagia Screening at a Community Hospital.
Publication/Presentation Date
9-7-2021
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dysphagia is a common complication seen in acute ischemic stroke patients, and can lead to morbidity and mortality. As such, quality measures have been instituted to track adherence to dysphagia screening in all stroke patients. In our 217-bed community hospital, we were faced with a low rate in successfully screening for dysphagia.
METHODS: Quality control interventions were implemented after an analysis of the reasons for dysphagia screening failures was performed. Interventions included online educational sessions for nurses, face-to-face sessions with medical residents, distribution of educational laminated cards, changing the method of documenting the dysphagia screen in our electronic record and others.
RESULTS: There was an increase of rates of screening for dysphagia from 67% to 91%.
CONCLUSION: We conclude that failure analysis, implementation of quality control measures to address the cause of failures and re-evaluating success rates periodically was effective to address this problem.
Volume
26
Issue
5
First Page
167
Last Page
169
ISSN
2331-2637
Published In/Presented At
Shenoy, A. M., McCune, M., & AbdelRazek, M. A. (2021). A Multifaceted Approach to Improving Postischemic Stroke Dysphagia Screening at a Community Hospital. The neurologist, 26(5), 167–169. https://doi.org/10.1097/NRL.0000000000000340
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
34491931
Department(s)
Department of Medicine
Document Type
Article