Retention of discharge instructions using an interdisciplinary model for at-risk children with cancer: A quality improvement initiative.

Publication/Presentation Date

1-1-2023

Abstract

PURPOSE: We sought to improve caregiver retention of critical initial hospital discharge instructions using a multidisciplinary, team-based intervention for newly diagnosed pediatric cancer patients at high risk for unfavorable outcomes.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: A multidisciplinary team of pediatric residents, nurses, social workers, pharmacists and hematology/oncology faculty implemented practices to optimize teaching of key discharge material as part of four Plan-Do-Study-Act intervention cycles. An 11-question survey distributed at the first post-discharge clinic visit assessed the efficacy of the intervention, as defined by caregiver retention of critical home instructions.

RESULTS: Thirty-nine caregivers of pediatric cancer patients in an urban academic tertiary-care children's hospital took part in this project. Overall retention of key discharge information was greater in the post-intervention cohort compared to the baseline cohort (median total scores: 89 and 63, respectively; p = .001). Improvements in the proportions of correct responses post-intervention were also observed across all subject matters: from 0.57 to 0.88 for fever guidelines (p = .059), from 0.71 to 0.78 for signs of sepsis (p = .65), from 0.57 to 1.00 for accurate choice of on-call number (p = .004), and from 0.71 to 0.94 for antiemetic management (p = .14).

CONCLUSION: Initiation of our comprehensive cancer-specific program to improve caregiver retention of discharge instructions at the first post-hospitalization clinic visit has been successful and sustainable. This project demonstrated that a multi-disciplinary collaborative team effort increases caregiver retention of critical health information, and this has potential to lead to improved outcomes for patients.

Volume

70

Issue

1

First Page

30045

Last Page

30045

ISSN

1545-5017

Disciplines

Medicine and Health Sciences | Pediatrics

PubMedID

36215215

Department(s)

Department of Pediatrics

Document Type

Article

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