Increasing patient flow through neurosurgical critical care: the Leeds Improvement Method

At Leeds General Infirmary, a busy tertiary centre for neurosurgery, there has been little visibility of the step-down status of the patients from intensive care to high dependency or from the latter to a ward bed. The only record of the current situation was limited to the paper notes of the bed ma...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Soumya Mukherjee, James Meacock, Asim Sheikh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2021-06-01
Series:BMJ Open Quality
Online Access:https://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/10/2/e001143.full
id doaj-a0fac9762e9c475e8fce58542c6d862a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-a0fac9762e9c475e8fce58542c6d862a2021-06-27T09:00:32ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Open Quality2399-66412021-06-0110210.1136/bmjoq-2020-001143Increasing patient flow through neurosurgical critical care: the Leeds Improvement MethodSoumya Mukherjee0James Meacock1Asim Sheikh2Neurosciences, Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, Leeds, UKNeurosciences, Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, Leeds, UKNeurosciences, Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, Leeds, UKAt Leeds General Infirmary, a busy tertiary centre for neurosurgery, there has been little visibility of the step-down status of the patients from intensive care to high dependency or from the latter to a ward bed. The only record of the current situation was limited to the paper notes of the bed managers. Furthermore, accuracy of electronic systems used for staffing levels and bed state were underused. There were gaps in information and furthermore information within the system was unreliable (together defined as ‘defects’). These defects mandated bed managers’ physical presence on each ward to obtain reliable data. This led to unwarranted critical care stays and resultant high rates (up to 40%) of elective operation cancellations requiring a critical care bed.The Leeds Improvement Method using principles of the Toyota Production System aimed to improve patient flow through critical care and to assess the impact on elective case activity. Problems were identified and changes were implemented over a 1-week period. The changes included measures to reduce time taken for collation of critical bed-state information and improving patient and staffing data quality collected in the electronic patient management system (EPMS) and electronic staffing record (ESR). Impact was monitored for 30 days pre-implementation and post-implementation.Following intervention, the time taken by the bed manager to gather live bed-state information decreased from 50 to 9 min; the EPMS storing correct bed-state data was improved from 71% to 0% defect; the ESR was improved from 100% to 4% defects; critical care patient step-downs occurring at night (after 20:00) improved from 80% to 20%; and the number of cancelled elective cases over a 30-day period reduced from nine to one.Implementing these organisational efficiencies can significantly improve critical care patient flow and elective case throughput.https://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/10/2/e001143.full
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Soumya Mukherjee
James Meacock
Asim Sheikh
spellingShingle Soumya Mukherjee
James Meacock
Asim Sheikh
Increasing patient flow through neurosurgical critical care: the Leeds Improvement Method
BMJ Open Quality
author_facet Soumya Mukherjee
James Meacock
Asim Sheikh
author_sort Soumya Mukherjee
title Increasing patient flow through neurosurgical critical care: the Leeds Improvement Method
title_short Increasing patient flow through neurosurgical critical care: the Leeds Improvement Method
title_full Increasing patient flow through neurosurgical critical care: the Leeds Improvement Method
title_fullStr Increasing patient flow through neurosurgical critical care: the Leeds Improvement Method
title_full_unstemmed Increasing patient flow through neurosurgical critical care: the Leeds Improvement Method
title_sort increasing patient flow through neurosurgical critical care: the leeds improvement method
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
series BMJ Open Quality
issn 2399-6641
publishDate 2021-06-01
description At Leeds General Infirmary, a busy tertiary centre for neurosurgery, there has been little visibility of the step-down status of the patients from intensive care to high dependency or from the latter to a ward bed. The only record of the current situation was limited to the paper notes of the bed managers. Furthermore, accuracy of electronic systems used for staffing levels and bed state were underused. There were gaps in information and furthermore information within the system was unreliable (together defined as ‘defects’). These defects mandated bed managers’ physical presence on each ward to obtain reliable data. This led to unwarranted critical care stays and resultant high rates (up to 40%) of elective operation cancellations requiring a critical care bed.The Leeds Improvement Method using principles of the Toyota Production System aimed to improve patient flow through critical care and to assess the impact on elective case activity. Problems were identified and changes were implemented over a 1-week period. The changes included measures to reduce time taken for collation of critical bed-state information and improving patient and staffing data quality collected in the electronic patient management system (EPMS) and electronic staffing record (ESR). Impact was monitored for 30 days pre-implementation and post-implementation.Following intervention, the time taken by the bed manager to gather live bed-state information decreased from 50 to 9 min; the EPMS storing correct bed-state data was improved from 71% to 0% defect; the ESR was improved from 100% to 4% defects; critical care patient step-downs occurring at night (after 20:00) improved from 80% to 20%; and the number of cancelled elective cases over a 30-day period reduced from nine to one.Implementing these organisational efficiencies can significantly improve critical care patient flow and elective case throughput.
url https://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/10/2/e001143.full
work_keys_str_mv AT soumyamukherjee increasingpatientflowthroughneurosurgicalcriticalcaretheleedsimprovementmethod
AT jamesmeacock increasingpatientflowthroughneurosurgicalcriticalcaretheleedsimprovementmethod
AT asimsheikh increasingpatientflowthroughneurosurgicalcriticalcaretheleedsimprovementmethod
_version_ 1721358424250253312